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Box Plots


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Abstract

The goal of this lesson is to introduce box plots and quartiles. An activity and discussion with supplemental exercises help students learn how data can be graphically represented.

Objectives

Upon completion of this lesson, students will:

  • have reviewed the concept of median
  • have learned how to calculate quartiles for any size data set
  • have learned how to build a box plot

Standards Addressed:

Textbooks Aligned:

Student Prerequisites

  • Arithmetic: Student must be able to:
    • put numbers in order from smallest to largest
    • calculate the average of two numbers
  • Technological: Student must be able to:
    • perform basic mouse manipulations such as point, click and drag
    • use a browser for experimenting with the activities

Teacher Preparation

  • Access to a browser
  • pencil and paper
  • The worksheet for the box plot activity's built in data sets
  • The worksheet for working with the data collected from the class (see below)

Key Terms

arithmetic meanSee mean
averageIt is better to avoid this sometimes vague term. It usually refers to the (arithmetic) mean, but it can also signify the median, the mode, the geometric mean, and weighted mean, among other things
box plotAlso called box-and-whisker plot, this graph shows the distribution of data by dividing the data into four groups with the same number of data points in each group. The box contains the middle 50% of the data points and each of the two whiskers contain 25% of the data points.
histogramA bar graph such that the area over each class interval is proportional to the relative frequency of data within this interval
meanThe sum of a list of numbers, divided by the total number of numbers in the list. Also called arithmetic mean
median"Middle value" of a list. The smallest number such that at least half the numbers in the list are no greater than it. If the list has an odd number of entries, the median is the middle entry in the list after sorting the list into increasing order. If the list has an even number of entries, the median is equal to the sum of the two middle (after sorting) numbers divided by two. The median can be estimated from a histogram by finding the smallest number such that the area under the histogram to the left of that number is 50%
modeFor lists, the mode is the most common (frequent) value. A list can have more than one mode. For histograms, a mode is a relative maximum ("bump"). A data set has no mode when all the numbers appear in the data with the same frequency. A data set has multiple modes when two or more values appear with the same frequency.
multimodal distributionA distribution with more than one mode. The histogram of a multimodal distribution has more than one "bump"
rangeThe range of a set of numbers is the largest value in the set minus the smallest value in the set. Note that the range is a single number, not many numbers
totalA total is determining the overall sum of numbers or a quantity.

Lesson Outline

  1. Focus and Review

    Remind students what has been learned in previous lessons that will be pertinent to this lesson and/or have them begin to think about the words and ideas of this lesson:

    • What are some examples of different ways that we have found to portray data?

  2. Objectives

    Let the students know what it is they will be doing and learning today. Say something like this:

    • Today, class, we are going to learn about box plots.
    • We are going to use the computers to learn about box plots, but please do not turn your computers on until I ask you to. I want to show you a little about this activity first.

  3. Teacher Input

    • Remind students of the ideas behind means and medians, as covered in the Mean, Median and Mode discussion
    • Walk students through the construction of quartiles, the five-number summary and box plot construction as in the Box Plot discussion

  4. Guided Practice

    • Have students experiment with the built-in data sets available in the Box Plot activity to be sure that they understand how to read the the box plots. Questions for the data sets can be found in the worksheet.

  5. Independent Practice

    • Have the students collect the following data from each other:
      • Gender
      • Height
      • Length of ride/walk to school in minutes
      • Estimate number of hours of TV watched in a week.
    • Have the students explore the questions on box plots by building the appropriate box plots either by hand or using the Box Plot activity. With less mature students, it would be best to help them decide which box plot to graph for each question

  6. Closure

    • You may wish to bring the class back together for a discussion of the findings. Once the students have been allowed to share what they found, summarize the results of the lesson.

Alternate Outline

This lesson can be rearranged in several ways.

  • Students can be asked to work with the notion of outliers, as can be done with the Box Plot activity

Suggested Follow-Up

If the students have not yet seen histograms, the lesson on Histograms and Bar Graphs makes a good follow-up. For more advanced students, The Bell Curve, covers the normal distribution and the bell curve controversy.

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