If you try to put the data below into a frequency table, you will get a very large table, with a lot of frequencies of 0 and 1.
To get a more useful frequency table,
you can group data.
Slide 2 - Slide
Grouping data
Instead of counting the frequency of every separate value, you make groups of values, called class intervals.
Each class interval is the same size
Notice that 7.0 belongs in
the class interval from 7 to 8,
NOT from 6 to 7.
Slide 3 - Slide
Modal class
When you have a frequency table with
grouped data, you do not talk about the
mode, but about the modal class.
This is the class interval with the
highest frequency.
Here the modal class is from 7 to 8.
Slide 4 - Slide
Midpoint
To calculate the mean from a frequency table with grouped data, you first calculate the midpoints of each group. This is the mean of the class boundaries.
midpoint from 3 to 4: (3 + 4)/2 = 3.5
midpoint from 4 to 5: (4 +5)/2 = 3.5
etc.
Slide 5 - Slide
Do you know what 'dirty data' means?
It is WRONG INFORMATION.
See next slide for more!
Slide 6 - Slide
Slide 7 - Slide
Mean
Calculating the mean from a frequency table with grouped data is very similar to the method for a normal frequency table.
- multiply the frequency with the midpoint for each class interval
- add up the results and add up the frequencies
- divide the total of the multiplications by the total of the frequencies