Data Visualizations
Sketch It
Calculating Center and Spread
Symbols
Describing Distributions
100

When is it appropriate to use a bar chart vs histogram to represent data?

Bar chart = categorical variable; Histogram for numerical variable

100

Unimodal vs Bimodal vs Multimodal

1 peak vs 2 peaks vs 3 or more peaks

100

Explain how to find each measure of center (mean, median, mode)

Mean= Total of data values divided by the number of data in set; Median = sort data from least to greatest, "middle number"; Mode = most frequent occurrence in data set

100

n

number of values

100

Which measures of center and spread are preferentially used to describe normally distributed data?

Mean and Standard Deviation

200

In a histogram or bar chart, the vertical axis represents frequency.  What's the difference in relative frequency and (quantitative) frequency.

(quantitative) frequency = raw counts of data; relative frequency = percentages so all bars added together should equal 100%

200
Left skewed vs Right Skewed vs Symmetrical

Left =tail to the left, Right = tail to the right, symmetrical =  bell-shaped

200

Explain how to find the IQR given a list of values.

Put in order, find Q1 and Q3, then subtract Q3-Q1.

200

(pronounced mu)

population mean 

200

Which measures of center and spread are preferentially used to describe skewed data?

Median and IQR

300

In creating bins for a histogram, bin sizes must be ...

evenly spaced (same amount in each range)

300

Distribution where mean=median=mode (or very close)

Roughly symmetrical

300

Using your notes, explain the processes of calculating the standard deviation.

Find the mean, subtract the mean from each value, square each, add, divide by n-1, square root.

300

(pronounced x bar)

sample mean

300

What does it mean for a sample to have a standard deviation of zero?

There is no variability in the data (only a single score)

400

When deciding how many bins to use in a histogram, what is the general idea you must keep in mind?

You want enough bins to be able to identify the shape of the distribution.  

400

2 Distributions:

one where the mean > median; other where mean < median

One mean > median = right-skewed; other mean < median = left-skewed

400

How do you calculate the mean of a frequency chart?

You multiply each value times its frequency, add up those totals, then divide by how many data points you have.

400

Greek letter Sigma

the summation of

400

A student was making calculations of center and spread on a set of data from a survey question response: {2, 2, 4, 1, 3, 2, 1, 2, 7}.  After calculating, one last survey response came in late with a response answer of 12.  Needing to recalculate the center and spread, what calculations will/will not change: IQR? S.D.? Mean? Median? 

Median will be the only one that will not change.

500

In labeling the histogram horizontal axis, the number on the marks at the end point of the bin indicate...

the maximum value included in the bin.

500

Create a boxplot with the given data (include 5 number summary)

7, 5, 11, 10, 2, 13, 9

Min = 2, Q1 = 6, Med = 9, Q3 = 10.5, Max = 13

500

How do you calculate the median, Q1, and Q3 of a frequency chart?

You count from one end to the other, identifying which bin contains the halfway point, the 25th percentile, and the 75th percentile, respectively.

500

s2

Variance (when finding standard deviation it's what you are taking the square root of)

500

In a open-ended question, if it asks you to describe a distribution, what all must you have detailed accurately in your written conclusion for full credit?

Center (mean or median), Unique features (outliers, modality), Shape (skewed etc.), Spread (S.D. or IQR) used within context.  (Only time Mrs. Zachary encourages anyone to CUSS.)