User 136 · Research · Groups · Kruskal Wallis Test
Executive Summary

Executive Summary

Overall significance, effect size, and key pairwise findings

Observations
1000
Groups
6
H Statistic
26.506
P Value
0.0001
Effect Size (ε²)
0.0265
Significant
Yes
Effect Magnitude
Small
Significant Pairs
4
Kruskal-Wallis test on outcome across 6 groups (H = 26.506, df = 5, p = 1e-04): statistically significant. Effect size ε² = 0.0265 (small effect). 1000 observations retained after removing groups smaller than 5. 4 out of 15 pairwise comparisons are significant after bonferroni correction.
Interpretation

Kruskal-Wallis test on outcome across 6 groups (H = 26.506, df = 5, p = 1e-04): statistically significant. Effect size ε² = 0.0265 (small effect). 1000 observations retained after removing groups smaller than 5. 4 out of 15 pairwise comparisons are significant after bonferroni correction.

Data Table

Group Descriptive Statistics

Median, IQR, and sample size per group for each outcome variable

GroupOutcomeNIQROutcome 2 MedianOutcome 3 Median
master's degree735925.57675
bachelor's degree68118187374
some college67.52261770.570
associate's degree672222372.570.5
some high school65179216766
high school6319618.26664
Interpretation

The group 'master's degree' has the highest median outcome at 73. Table shows median (middle value), IQR (spread), and n (sample size) per group. Higher medians indicate better typical performance for that group.

Visualization

Score Distributions by Group

Box plots of outcome by group — shows spread, median, and outliers

Interpretation

The box plot reveals how outcome is distributed within each group. Group 'master's degree' has the highest median while 'high school' has the lowest, a range of 10 points. Overlapping boxes suggest groups are similar; non-overlapping boxes suggest real differences.

Data Table

Kruskal-Wallis Test Results

H statistic, degrees of freedom, p-value, and epsilon-squared for each outcome

Outcome VAROutcomeH StatDfP ValueEps SqNSignificant
outcome0.026526.5150.00010.02651000Yes
outcome_20.038738.66500.03871000Yes
outcome_30.062462.33500.06241000Yes
Interpretation

3 of 3 outcome(s) show significant group differences: outcome, outcome_2, outcome_3. H is the test statistic — larger values mean greater rank dispersion across groups. Epsilon-squared (ε²) measures practical effect size: 0.01 = small, 0.06 = medium, 0.14+ = large.

Visualization

Median Scores by Education Level

Horizontal bar chart of median outcome per group, sorted low to high

Interpretation

Group 'master's degree' has the highest median outcome at 73 while 'high school' has the lowest at 63. The bar lengths make it easy to see the rank ordering of groups and estimate how large the between-group gap is in practical terms.

Visualization

Pairwise Group Comparisons (Dunn Test)

Adjusted p-values heatmap — cells below 0.05 (bonferroni corrected) indicate significant pairs

Interpretation

4 of 15 group pairs are significantly different after bonferroni correction (α = 0.05). Darker cells indicate smaller (more significant) adjusted p-values. Pairs with p_adj < 0.05 suggest real distributional differences.

Data Table

Significant Pairwise Differences

All 15 group pairs ranked by adjusted p-value

GroupOutcomeZ StatP RawP AdjSignificant
bachelor's degree vs high school0.00143.9090.00010.0014Yes
associate's degree vs high school0.00733.4870.00050.0073Yes
high school vs master's degree0.0155-3.2820.0010.0155Yes
high school vs some college0.0209-3.1960.00140.0209Yes
bachelor's degree vs some high school0.0632.8630.00420.063No
master's degree vs some high school0.20072.4740.01340.2007No
associate's degree vs some high school0.36862.2480.02460.3686No
some college vs some high school0.75221.9590.05010.7522No
associate's degree vs bachelor's degree1-0.9980.31851No
associate's degree vs master's degree1-0.9930.32051No
associate's degree vs some college10.3160.75211No
bachelor's degree vs master's degree1-0.20.84161No
bachelor's degree vs some college11.2630.20651No
high school vs some high school1-1.1220.2621No
master's degree vs some college11.1990.23041No
Interpretation

4 of 15 pairwise comparisons are significant at α = 0.05 after bonferroni correction. The most significant pair is 'bachelor's degree vs high school' with p_adj = 0.0014. Pairs marked 'Yes' have distributions that differ beyond what chance alone would produce.

Your data has more stories to tell. Run any analysis on your own data — 60+ validated R modules, interactive reports, AI insights, and PDF export. 2,000 free credits on signup.
Try Free — No Signup Sign Up Free

Report an Issue

Tell us what's wrong. You'll get a free re-run of this analysis so you can try again with different parameters. If the re-run still doesn't meet your expectations, we'll refund your credits.

Want to run this analysis on your own data? Upload CSV — Free Analysis See Pricing