Learn on PengienVision, Mathematics, Grade 6Chapter 8: Display, Describe, and Summarize Data

Lesson 2: Summarize Data Using Mean, Median, Mode, and Range

In this Grade 6 lesson from enVision Mathematics Chapter 8, students learn how to summarize a data set using measures of center — mean, median, and mode — and the measure of variability known as range. Students practice calculating each statistic from real-world data, including how to find the mean by dividing the sum of values, identify the median by ordering data and locating the middle value, and determine the range by subtracting the least value from the greatest. The lesson also develops reasoning skills around how changes to a data set affect these summary statistics.

Section 1

Calculating the Mean

Property

The mean is the sum of the values in a data set divided by the number of values in the set.

Mean=Sum of the valuesNumber of values\text{Mean} = \frac{\text{Sum of the values}}{\text{Number of values}}

Section 2

Calculating the Median

Property

The median is a number that divides an ordered data set into two parts with an equal number of values in each part.
To find the median, you must first put the values in order from lowest to highest.

  • If there are an odd number of data points, the median is the number right in the middle.
  • If there are an even number of data points, the median is the number halfway between the two middle values (their mean).

Examples

  • For the data set {9, 2, 7, 5, 11}, we first order it: {2, 5, 7, 9, 11}. Since there are five values, the middle value is the 3rd one, so the median is 7.
  • For the data set {14, 6, 8, 20}, we order it: {6, 8, 14, 20}. With an even number of values, the median is the mean of the two middle numbers: 8+142=11\frac{8+14}{2} = 11.
  • The prices of five houses on a street are 200k, 210k, 225k, 240k, and 950k dollars. The median price is 225k dollars, which is a more typical value than the mean (365k dollars), which is skewed by the expensive house.

Section 3

Calculating the Mode

Property

The third measure of center is called the mode. This is the number that appears more often than any other number(s).

  • A data set can be bimodal if two values occur with the same maximum frequency.
  • If no value occurs more often than any other, there is no mode.
  • The mode can be used on both numerical (quantitative) and categorical (qualitative) data.

Examples

  • In the list of shoe sizes {7, 8, 9, 8, 6, 8, 10}, the number 8 appears most often. Therefore, the mode is 8.
  • A class votes for their favorite pet: Dog, Cat, Fish, Dog, Cat, Bird. This data is bimodal because both Dog and Cat are the most frequent choices.
  • The data set {1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6} has no repeating values, so we say it has no mode.

Book overview

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Chapter 8: Display, Describe, and Summarize Data

  1. Lesson 1

    Lesson 1: Recognize Statistical Questions

  2. Lesson 2Current

    Lesson 2: Summarize Data Using Mean, Median, Mode, and Range

  3. Lesson 3

    Lesson 3: Display Data in Box Plots

  4. Lesson 4

    Lesson 4: Display Data in Frequency Tables and Histograms

  5. Lesson 5

    Lesson 5: Summarize Data Using Measures of Variability

  6. Lesson 6

    Lesson 6: Choose Appropriate Statistical Measures

  7. Lesson 7

    Lesson 7: Summarize Data Distributions

Lesson overview

Expand to review the lesson summary and core properties.

Expand

Section 1

Calculating the Mean

Property

The mean is the sum of the values in a data set divided by the number of values in the set.

Mean=Sum of the valuesNumber of values\text{Mean} = \frac{\text{Sum of the values}}{\text{Number of values}}

Section 2

Calculating the Median

Property

The median is a number that divides an ordered data set into two parts with an equal number of values in each part.
To find the median, you must first put the values in order from lowest to highest.

  • If there are an odd number of data points, the median is the number right in the middle.
  • If there are an even number of data points, the median is the number halfway between the two middle values (their mean).

Examples

  • For the data set {9, 2, 7, 5, 11}, we first order it: {2, 5, 7, 9, 11}. Since there are five values, the middle value is the 3rd one, so the median is 7.
  • For the data set {14, 6, 8, 20}, we order it: {6, 8, 14, 20}. With an even number of values, the median is the mean of the two middle numbers: 8+142=11\frac{8+14}{2} = 11.
  • The prices of five houses on a street are 200k, 210k, 225k, 240k, and 950k dollars. The median price is 225k dollars, which is a more typical value than the mean (365k dollars), which is skewed by the expensive house.

Section 3

Calculating the Mode

Property

The third measure of center is called the mode. This is the number that appears more often than any other number(s).

  • A data set can be bimodal if two values occur with the same maximum frequency.
  • If no value occurs more often than any other, there is no mode.
  • The mode can be used on both numerical (quantitative) and categorical (qualitative) data.

Examples

  • In the list of shoe sizes {7, 8, 9, 8, 6, 8, 10}, the number 8 appears most often. Therefore, the mode is 8.
  • A class votes for their favorite pet: Dog, Cat, Fish, Dog, Cat, Bird. This data is bimodal because both Dog and Cat are the most frequent choices.
  • The data set {1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6} has no repeating values, so we say it has no mode.

Book overview

Jump across lessons in the current chapter without opening the full course modal.

Continue this chapter

Chapter 8: Display, Describe, and Summarize Data

  1. Lesson 1

    Lesson 1: Recognize Statistical Questions

  2. Lesson 2Current

    Lesson 2: Summarize Data Using Mean, Median, Mode, and Range

  3. Lesson 3

    Lesson 3: Display Data in Box Plots

  4. Lesson 4

    Lesson 4: Display Data in Frequency Tables and Histograms

  5. Lesson 5

    Lesson 5: Summarize Data Using Measures of Variability

  6. Lesson 6

    Lesson 6: Choose Appropriate Statistical Measures

  7. Lesson 7

    Lesson 7: Summarize Data Distributions