In this lesson:
By the end of this lesson, you should be able to:
Your class just finished a test. Scores (out of 20): 12, 14, 15, 15, 16, 17, 18
Someone asks: "How did the class do?" You can only say one number.
A measure of center gives a single number that represents the typical value in a data set.
Both summarize the typical value — but handle outliers differently.
Both data sets have a mean of 5. Are they the same?
Set A: {5, 5, 5, 5} — mean = 5
Set B: {2, 4, 6, 8} — mean = 5
A measure of variation describes how spread out values are around the center.
Calculations come in 6.SP.B.5.
Both sets have mean = 5. Watch what the variation measures reveal:
Set A {5, 5, 5, 5}: range = 0, MAD = 0
Set B {2, 4, 6, 8}: range = 6, MAD = 2
Two pizza services both average 30 minutes delivery time.
The complete summary: Center + Variation together
"The data is centered around X, and values typically vary by Y."
Scores: 12, 14, 15, 15, 16, 17, 18 — Mean ≈ 15.3, Range = 6
Complete: "The scores are centered around ___, and values vary by about ___."
Both classes: mean score = 14
Which class was more consistent? Write a two-sentence summary.
✓ Same center — very different stories. Variation reveals the difference.
What students sometimes think:
"The mean is 15, so everyone scored 15."
What's actually true:
"The mean is 15" means 15 is the typical value — a summary.
These are different questions — they need different measures.
"The daily high temperatures last week ranged from 58°F to 82°F. Which measure describes how consistent the temperatures were?"
Think: which question is being asked — "what is typical?" or "how spread out?"
Distribution shape guides the choice (6.SP.B.5 covers this fully):
Always pair a center measure with a variation measure.
30 students tracked books read in a month. Most read 2–4 books; two students read 18 and 22.
Which pair best summarizes this data?
Best choice: Median + IQR (Option B)
✓ Symmetric → mean + MAD ✓ Skewed / outliers → median + IQR
✓ Center: one number represents the typical value
✓ Variation: one number describes the spread around the center
✓ Both together give a complete statistical summary
The mean describes the group — not any individual's value
Center and variation answer different questions
Symmetric → mean + MAD; outliers present → median + IQR
Next lesson — 6.SP.B.5: Calculating and choosing measures
Click to begin the narrated lesson
Recognize that a measure of center summarizes all values with a single number