Back to Informally assess the degree of visual overlap of two numerical data distributions

Comparing Two Data Distributions: MAD and Overlap

Show all work for MAD computations. Round answers to one decimal place when needed.

Grade 7·~40 min·Common Core Math - Grade 7·standard·7-sp-b-3
Work through problems with immediate feedback
A

Recall / Warm-Up

1.

The data set is 4, 6, 7, 9, 14. What is the mean?

2.

Evaluate 8.512|8.5 - 12|.

3.

Compute the mean of the data set: 5, 7, 7, 9, 10, 10.

B

Fluency Practice

1.

The data set is 3, 5, 6, 7, 9, and the mean is 6. Compute the Mean Absolute Deviation (MAD).

2.

Group A has a mean of 24. Group B has a mean of 18. The average MAD for both groups is 3. Compute the MAD-multiple (difference in means divided by average MAD).

3.

Two data distributions have a MAD-multiple of 2.1. Which statement is most accurate?

4.

The data set is 8, 10, 12, 14, 16, 18, 20, 22. Compute the MAD.

5.

A MAD-multiple of 0.5 most likely indicates which of these?

C

Varied Practice

1.

Group A has values ranging from 30 to 50. Group B has values ranging from 40 to 60. They share values between 40 and 50. A student concludes: 'The groups overlap substantially because they share a range of values.' What is wrong with this reasoning?

2.

A data set has a range of 20 and a MAD of 4. Which statement is TRUE?

Dot plot showing Group A values from 8 to 20 and Group B values from 16 to 28, with overlapping values at 16, 18, and 20.
3.

The dot plot below shows two distributions — Group A and Group B — on a shared number line. Which statement best describes their relationship?

4.

Group P has a mean of 20. Group Q has a mean of 13. Each group has a MAD of 3.5. The difference in means is   ̲ ̲ ̲ ̲ ̲ ̲ ̲ ̲ ̲ ̲ ̲ ̲ ̲ ̲ ̲ ̲ ̲ ̲ ̲ ̲ ̲ ̲   . The MAD-multiple is   ̲ ̲ ̲ ̲ ̲ ̲ ̲ ̲ ̲ ̲ ̲ ̲ ̲ ̲ ̲ ̲ ̲ ̲ ̲ ̲ ̲ ̲   . The two distributions are best described as   ̲ ̲ ̲ ̲ ̲ ̲ ̲ ̲ ̲ ̲ ̲ ̲ ̲ ̲ ̲ ̲ ̲ ̲ ̲ ̲ ̲ ̲   .

difference in means:
MAD-multiple:
description:
D

Word Problems

1.

A teacher surveys two reading groups about the number of books each student read over the summer. Class A (6 students): 5, 6, 7, 7, 8, 9. Class B: mean = 10 books, MAD = 1.0 book.

1.

Find the mean and MAD for Class A.

2.

Using Class B's mean (10 books) and MAD (1.0 book), compute the MAD-multiple and write one complete sentence describing the separation between the two classes.

2.

A basketball team has a mean height of 182 cm and a soccer team has a mean height of 170 cm. The average MAD for both teams is 4 cm. Compute the MAD-multiple.

3.

Group P (reaction time): mean = 5.0 sec, MAD = 1.5 sec. Group Q (reaction time): mean = 8.0 sec, MAD = 1.5 sec. (a) Compute the MAD-multiple using the average MAD. (b) Write a complete comparison statement that includes specific numbers and a description of the separation.

4.

A statistical analysis finds that basketball players' mean height is 12 cm greater than soccer players' mean height, with a MAD-multiple of 3.0. A student writes: 'Basketball players are better athletes than soccer players because they are taller.' What is wrong with this statement?

E

Error Analysis

Two-column contrast card: left shows raw deviations summing to 0 (wrong), right shows absolute deviations summing to 12 giving MAD 2.4 (correct).
1.

Jordan finds the mean of the data set {8, 10, 12, 14, 16} to be 12. He then computes deviations from the mean:

812=48 - 12 = -4
1012=210 - 12 = -2
1212=012 - 12 = 0
1412=+214 - 12 = +2
1612=+416 - 12 = +4

He averages the deviations: (4+(2)+0+2+4)÷5=0÷5=0(-4 + (-2) + 0 + 2 + 4) \div 5 = 0 \div 5 = 0.
He concludes: "MAD = 0, so there is no variability in this data set."

What error did Jordan make?

2.

Two data distributions have these statistics:

  • Group A: mean = 180 cm, range = 20 cm, MAD = 4 cm
  • Group B: mean = 170 cm, range = 18 cm, MAD = 4 cm

Nina computes the MAD-multiple as:
(180170)÷average range=10÷190.53(180 - 170) \div \text{average range} = 10 \div 19 \approx 0.53

She concludes: "With a ratio of only 0.53, the separation is barely noticeable."

What error did Nina make, and what is the correct answer?

F

Challenge

1.

Here are test scores for two classes. Class M: 65, 68, 72, 75, 78, 80, 82, 84. Class N: 78, 80, 83, 85, 88, 90, 92, 96. (a) Compute the mean and MAD for each class. (b) Compute the MAD-multiple using the average MAD. (c) Write a complete interpretation statement describing the separation.

2.

The difference in means between Group A and Group B is 6 units. Student X says the separation is large; Student Y says it is small. Neither student is necessarily wrong. Explain what additional information is needed to determine who is right, and give a specific numerical example that would make each student correct.

0 of 21 answered