Skip to content

Charts & Graphs

Spec reference: Statistics
Key idea: Draw and interpret statistical charts including bar charts, pie charts, histograms, scatter graphs and cumulative frequency.



Bar charts

Used for discrete or categorical data. Bars should have equal width and gaps between them.


Pie charts

Each sector represents a category. The angle for each sector:

Angle=frequencytotal×360°

Example

30 students were asked their favourite subject. 12 chose Maths.

Angle=1230×360°=144°

Scatter graphs & correlation

Used to show the relationship between two variables.

CorrelationMeaning
PositiveAs x increases, y increases
NegativeAs x increases, y decreases
No correlationNo relationship

The line of best fit passes through the mean point and has roughly equal points on each side.

WARNING

Correlation does NOT mean causation.


Cumulative frequency

Plot cumulative frequency against the upper class boundary.

From a cumulative frequency graph:

  • Median = value at n2
  • LQ = value at n4
  • UQ = value at 3n4
  • IQR = UQ − LQ

Box plots

Shows: minimum, lower quartile (LQ), median, upper quartile (UQ), maximum.

IQR=UQLQ

Box plots are useful for comparing distributions.


Histograms

Used for continuous grouped data. The area of each bar represents frequency.

Frequency density=FrequencyClass width

WARNING

In a histogram, it is the area (not height) that represents frequency.


Frequency polygons

Connect the midpoints of each bar in a frequency chart. Used to compare distributions.


Exam tips

Watch out for

  • Pie chart angles must add up to exactly 360°
  • For cumulative frequency, plot at the UPPER end of each class interval
  • In histograms with unequal class widths, use frequency density (not frequency) on the y-axis

Test Yourself

Question 1 of 5

30 students, 10 prefer sport. Pie chart angle?

Ad

PassMaven - revision made simple.