000 Methods of Presentation of Data - Textual and FDT
000 Methods of Presentation of Data - Textual and FDT
000 Methods of Presentation of Data - Textual and FDT
1
METHODS OF
DATA
PRESENTATION
At the end of the lesson, the students should be able to
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Ungrouped vs. Grouped Data
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The 50 scores grouped into a
frequency distribution:
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Presentation of Data
Textual Tabular Graphical
Method Method Method
Rearrangeme Frequency Bar Chart
nt from distribution Histogram
lowest to table (FDT) Frequency
highest Relative FDT Polygon
Stem-and-leaf Cumulative Pie Chart
plot FDT Less than,
Contingency greater than
Table Ogive
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Textual Presentation of Data
Data can be presented using paragraphs or
sentences.
It involves enumerating important characteristics,
emphasizing significant figures and identifying
important features of data.
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Textual Presentation of Data
Example. You are asked to present the performance of your section in
the Statistics test. The following are the test scores of your class:
34 42 20 50 17 9 34 43
50 18 35 43 50 23 23 35
37 38 38 39 39 38 38 39
24 29 25 26 28 27 44 44
49 48 46 45 45 46 45 46
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Solution
First, arrange the data in order for you to identify the important
characteristics. This can be done in two ways: rearranging from lowest to
highest or using the stem-and-leaf plot.
Below is the rearrangement of data from lowest to highest:
9 23 28 35 38 43 45 48
17 24 29 37 39 43 45 49
18 25 34 38 39 44 46 50
20 26 34 38 39 44 46 50
23 27 35 38 42 45 46 50
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With the rearranged data, pertinent data worth
mentioning can be easily recognized. The following is
one way of presenting data in textual form.
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Another way of rearranging data is by making use of the
Stem-and-Leaf Plot.
Stem Leaves
0 9
1 7, 8
2 0, 3, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9
3 4, 4, 5, 5, 7, 8, 8, 8, 8, 9, 9, 9
4 2, 3, 3, 4, 4, 5, 5, 5, 6, 6, 6, 8, 9
5 0, 0, 0
Utilizing the stem-and-leaf plot, we can readily see the order of the data.
Thus, we can say that the top ten got scores 50, 50, 50, 49, 48, 46, 46, 46,45,
and 45 and the ten lowest scores are 9, 17, 18, 20, 23,23,24,25,26, and 27.
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17
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Frequency Distribution Table
A frequency distribution table is a table which
shows the data arranged into different
classes(or categories) and the number of
cases(or frequencies) which fall into each
class.
Age Frequency
12 2
13 13
14 27
15 4
16 3
17 1
N = 50
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Sample of a Frequency Distribution Table for Grouped Data
Table 1.2
Frequency Distribution Table for the Quiz Scores of 50 Students in Geometry
Scores Frequency
0-2 1
3-5 2
6-8 13
9 - 11 15
12 - 14 19
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Lower Class Limits
- are the smallest numbers that can actually belong to different classes
Rating Frequency
0-2 1
3-5 2
6-8 13
9 - 11 15
12 - 14 19
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Lower Class Limits
- are the smallest numbers that can actually belong to different classes
Rating Frequency
0-2 1
Lower Class 3-5 2
Limits 6-8 13
9 - 11 15
12 - 14 19
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Upper Class Limits
are the largest numbers that can actually belong to different classes
Rating Frequency
0-2 1
3-5 2
6-8 13
9 - 11 15
12 - 14 19
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Upper Class Limits
- are the largest numbers that can actually belong to different classes
Rating Frequency
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Class Boundaries
- are the numbers used to separate classes, but without the gaps
created by class limits
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Class Boundaries
- number separating classes
Rating Frequency
- 0.5
0-2 20
2.5
3-5 14
5.5
6-8 15
8.5
9 - 11 2
11.5
12 - 14 1
14.5
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Class Boundaries
- number separating classes
Rating Frequency
- 0.5
0-2 20
2.5
Class 3-5 14
5.5
Boundaries 6-8 15
8.5
9 - 11 2
11.5
12 - 14 1
14.5
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Class Midpoints
- the Class Mark or Class Midpoint is the
respective average of each class limits
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Class Midpoints
- midpoints of the classes
Rating Frequency
0- 1 2 20
Class
3- 4 5 14
Midpoints
6- 7 8 15
9 - 10 11 2
12 - 13 14 1
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Class Width
- is the difference between two consecutive lower
class limits or two consecutive class boundaries
Rating Frequency
0-2 20
3-5 14
6-8 15
9 - 11 2
12 - 14 1
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Class Width
- is the difference between two consecutive lower
class limits or two consecutive class boundaries
Rating Frequency
3 0-2 20
3 3-5 14
Class Width 3 6-8 15
3 9 - 11 2
3 12 - 14 1
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Guidelines For Frequency Tables
1. Be sure that the classes are mutually exclusive.
class frequency
relative frequency =
sum of all frequencies
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Relative Frequency Table
Relative
Rating Frequency Rating Frequency
Total frequency = 52
Table 2-5
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Cumulative Frequency Table
Rating Frequency <cf >cf
0-2 20 20 52
35 14 34 32
Cumulative
68 15 49 18
Frequencies
9 11 2 51 3
12 14 1 52 1
Table 2-6
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Frequency Tables
Relative Cumulative
Rating Frequency Rating Frequency Rating Frequency
9 - 11 2 9 - 11 3.8% 9 11 51
12 - 14 1 12 - 14 1.9% 12 14 52
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Complete FDT
A complete FDT has class mark or midpoint (x), class
boundaries (c.b), relative frequency or percentage
frequency, and the less than cumulative frequency
(<cf) and the greater than cumulative frequency(>cf).
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Complete Frequency Table
Table 2-6
Grouped Frequency Distribution for the Test
Scores of 52 Students in Statistics
Class Class Relative
Frequency Class
Intervals Boundary Frequency <cf >cf
(f) Mark (x)
(ci) (cb) (rf)
0-2 20 1 -0.5 2.5 38.5% 20 52
35 14 4 2.5 5.5 26.9% 34 32
68 15 7 5.5 8.5 28.8% 49 18
9 11 2 10 8.5 11.5 3.8% 51 3
12 14 1 13 11.5 14.5 1.9% 52 1
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Exercise
For each of the following class intervals, give the class width,
class mark , and class boundary
Class interval Class Width Class Mark Class Boundary
a. 4 8
b. 35 44
c. 17 21
d. 53 57
e. 8 11
f. 108 119
g. 10 19
h. 2.5 2. 9
i. 1. 75 2. 25
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Construct a complete FDT with 7 classes
The following are the IQ scores of 60 student applicants in
a certain high school
128 106 96 94 85 75
113 103 96 91 94 70
109 113 109 100 81 81
103 113 91 88 78 75
106 103 100 88 81 81
113 106 100 96 88 78
96 109 94 96 88 70
103 102 88 78 95 90
99 89 87 96 95 104
89 99 101 105 103 125
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CLASS LIMIT TALLY FREQUENCY RELATIVE CLASS MARK CLASS
FREQUENCY BOUNDARY
70 -
TOTAL
65
70