Introduction to Statistics: Mean, Median, and Mode

Abstract

The goal of this lesson is to introduce the concepts of mean, median and mode and to develop understanding and familiarity with these ideas.

Objectives

Upon completion of this lesson, students will:

  • understand three different measures of "center"
  • have been exposed to multiple ways of expressing a set of numbers
  • have practiced their arithmetic skills

Activities

This lesson introduces students to the concepts of mean, median, and mode through the following activity:

Standards

The activities and discussions in this lesson address the following Standards:

  • Mathematics as Communication
  • Mathematics as Reasoning
  • Geometry

Key Terms

This lesson introduces students to the following terms through the included discussions:

Student Prerequisites

  • Arithmetic prerequisites: Students should understand sums, differences, and quotients for all activities.
  • Technological prerequisites: Each student or group of students working together will need a computer with a Java-capable browser. Students should be comfortable using the computer and browser. Calculators may be helpful for solving problems that arise in discussions.

Teacher Preparation

Students will need:

Lesson Outline

  1. Introduce and develop the concepts of mean and median with the Measures activity. Students will change parameters and discover patterns related to mean and median. Students can choose their own focus of measure, their own quantity, and their own units. (20 min)
  2. Individually or in groups, students read and try to solve sample problems on mean, median, and mode. (30 min)
  3. Either have students read the discussion, or the instructor can prepare a "live" discussion, to deepen and formalize the students' intuitive understanding of mean, median, and mode. (10-20 min)

Alternate Outlines

  • Combine this lesson with the Bell Curve Lesson for a look at how means are related to distributions.

Suggested Follow-Up

This lesson introduced the students to some basic ways of describing sets of data. The next lesson, Histograms and Bar Graphs, introduces histograms, bar graphs and the concept of class interval. Students will learn to distinguish between bar graphs and histograms and to use each in the appropriate situations.

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