You can choose to assess your understanding of the hypothesis testing in one of several ways.
There are 30 definitions here. Some of the terms may have more than one definition.
These Flash animations all use the same set of data, the choice is up to you to see which learning method you would like to use.
There are 100 questions here that deal with identifying the claim, classical hypothesis testing, wording the conclusions, confidence intervals for making decisions, construction and deconstruction of confidence intervals, probability values for making decisions, identifying the tail of the test, deciding which is the null and alternative hypotheses, and identifying the type of error.
If you have an iPod with iPod Quiz or have purchased iQuiz for the iPod Video, you can download the questions and practice with your iPod. Here are download and installation instructions for iPod Quiz.
Part 1 consists of questions dealing with classical hypothesis testing, decisions based on confidence intervals, determining the tail of the test, deciding whether an English statement is the null or alternative hypothesis, and deciding what kind of test (1 proportion, 2 proportions, 1 mean, 2 independent means, or paired samples) is appropriate. There are 50 questions, enough for two rounds of the challenge.
Part 2 consists of questions dealing with the probability value approach, proper wording of the conclusion, determining whether an English statement is a type I or type II error, confidence intervals, and writing the original claim symbolically. There are 50 questions, enough for two rounds of the challenge.