1 / 14

Frequency Distribution Table

Frequency Distribution Table. Relative, cumulative: frequency. Percentile. The pth percentile of a distribution is the value such that p percent of the observation fall at or below it. 80% of the people who took the test earned scores that were less than or equal to your score.

marinel
Download Presentation

Frequency Distribution Table

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Frequency Distribution Table Relative, cumulative: frequency

  2. Percentile The pth percentile of a distribution is the value such that p percent of the observation fall at or below it.

  3. 80% of the people who took the test earned scores that were less than or equal to your score. Standardized test scores Roberto received his ACT score and it says he’s in the 80th percentile. What does that mean?

  4. Frequency distribution A tabulation of the number of individuals in each category on the scale of measurement. Frequency Distribution Table

  5. Age of US presidents at their respective inauguration

  6. 42 to 69 Class width of 5 from 40-44, 45-49... Presidential Ages at Inauguration 1. Get the range of the ages of the presidents 2. Decide on what class size to use 3. Construct your frequency distribution table

  7. FDT: Ages of the presidents at inauguration

  8. Constructing your OGIVE OGIVE: Relative Cumulative Frequency Graph Was Bill Clinton a young president? According to our ogive, it shows that Clinton’s age places him at the 10% RCF mark. Therefore Clinton was younger than about 90% of all the US presidents based on his inauguration age.

  9. Let’s find the distribution of the height of all the students in room 34 during this period.

  10. Range: Class width and size: Your turn! Height of 2011-2012 AP Statistics Students of BHS 73 - 59 = 14 Width: 3 Size: 58-60; 61-63; 64-66; 67-69; 70-72; 73-75

  11. FDT: Height of 2011-2012 AP Statistics Students of BHS

  12. Ogive:Height of 2011-2012 AP Statistics Students of BHS

  13. center Individuals variables categorical quantitative Dotplots Stemplots histogram percentile spread shape skewness outlier ogive FDT Individuals Vocabulary Summary

  14. Statistical tools • Describing SOCS and skewness • Constructing dotplots and stemplots • Describing the SOCS of your distribution • Creating histogram • Generating histogram using graphing calculator • Organizing data by FDT • Constructing ogive and finding percentile using ogive.

More Related