Why this matters for FAST: Students must read, interpret, and create data displays. They need to understand how the visual representation connects to statistical measures.
Why this matters for FAST: Students must read, interpret, and create data displays. They need to understand how the visual representation connects to statistical measures.
Students confuse histograms with bar graphs, not understanding that histogram bars touch because they show continuous data ranges.
"In a histogram, the bars touch because the data is continuous - one interval ends exactly where the next begins. Bar graphs show separate categories, so bars don't touch."
Students think all data points are inside the box, not realizing the box only contains the middle 50%.
"The box shows the middle 50% of data (from Q1 to Q3). The whiskers extend to the minimum and maximum, so ALL data is represented, but only the middle half is in the box!"
Students think the line inside the box plot shows the mean instead of the median.
"The line inside the box is ALWAYS the median - the middle value. It divides the data in half. The mean is not shown on a standard box plot!"
"A histogram shows how data is distributed across equal intervals. The height of each bar shows how many data points fall in that range. Unlike bar graphs, histogram bars TOUCH because the data is continuous."
Key features to identify:
"A box plot shows the five-number summary: minimum, Q1 (first quartile), median (Q2), Q3 (third quartile), and maximum. It lets us see the spread and identify if data is symmetric or skewed."
Five-Number Summary:
Example: Box plot showing test scores with Min=65, Q1=72, Median=80, Q3=88, Max=95
For Histograms: Choose intervals, count frequency for each, draw bars touching
For Box Plots: Order data, find five-number summary, draw box and whiskers
"In a box plot, if Q1 = 20 and Q3 = 50, what is the IQR?"
A) 70 B) 35 C) 30 D) 15
Correct answer: C) 30 (IQR = Q3 - Q1 = 50 - 20 = 30)
For struggling students: Start with line plots (familiar from earlier grades). Use number cards to physically arrange data before drawing plots.
For advanced students: Compare two box plots to analyze different groups. Discuss how outliers would appear on box plots.
For home: Send Parent Activity sheet. Families can find data displays in newspapers, magazines, or online.