Mean, Median & Mode

In this course, students will learn how to calculate and understand the three main measures of central tendency: mean, median, and mode.

The mean is the average of a set of numbers, found by adding all the values and dividing by the total number of values.

The median is the middle value when the numbers are arranged in order.

The mode is the number that appears most frequently.

Through this course, students will practice finding the mean, median and mode for discrete and continuous data.

Mean

The mean of a set of data represents the average value. For discrete data, it is calculated by adding all values and dividing by the number of values. For continuous data, the mean is found using the midpoint of each class, multiplied by its frequency, then dividing the total by the sum of frequencies. Mathematically,

\(mean=\frac{\sum f x}{\sum f}\)

Median

The median is the middle value of a data set when the numbers are arranged in order. For a data set with an odd number of values, the median is the middle number. For a data set with an even number of values, the median is the average of the two middle numbers. Finding the median is a two steps process:

  1. Find the middle position using the formula: \(Position=\frac{No\ of\ data\ set\ +\ 1}{2}\)
  2. The second step is to manually count the position to find the median

Mode

The mode is the value that appears most frequently in a data set. For discrete data, it is simply the number that occurs most number of times. If the data set has two modes, we must remember to use the word “and” instead of “or”, e.g. 2 and 5 are the mode, else no marks will be awarded.

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