Duration: 45 minutes
By the end of this lesson, you will be able to:
What we learned yesterday:
All three tell us about typical or central values
Look at these two data sets:
Set A: 48, 49, 50, 51, 52 (test scores) Set B: 20, 40, 50, 60, 80 (test scores)
Both have mean = 50
Question: Are these data sets the same?
Range measures how spread out the data is
The formula is simple:
Range = Highest value - Lowest value
Range tells us:
Set A: 48, 49, 50, 51, 52
Highest = 52 Lowest = 48 Range = 52 - 48 = 4
Set B: 20, 40, 50, 60, 80
Highest = 80 Lowest = 20 Range = 80 - 20 = 60
Now we can see the difference!
Small range (like 4):
Large range (like 60):
Temperatures last week: 24°C, 26°C, 25°C, 27°C, 26°C, 25°C, 24°C
Calculate the range:
Highest = 27°C Lowest = 24°C Range = 27 - 24 = 3°C
Interpretation: Temperatures were very consistent!
Price of matooke in different markets (shillings): 15,000, 18,000, 12,000, 22,000, 14,000
Highest = 22,000 shillings Lowest = 12,000 shillings Range = 22,000 - 12,000 = 10,000 shillings
Interpretation: Prices vary a lot between markets!
Learner heights (cm): 145, 150, 142, 155, 148, 152
In your exercise book:
You have 2 minutes!
Heights arranged: 142, 145, 148, 150, 152, 155 cm
Calculation: Highest = 155 cm Lowest = 142 cm Range = 155 - 142 = 13 cm
Interpretation: There's a 13 cm difference between the tallest and shortest learner.
Now we have FOUR statistics:
Together, they give a complete picture of the data!
Stall A mangoes sold per day: 20, 22, 21, 23, 20, 22, 20
Full analysis:
What does this tell us? Sales are very consistent, around 20-21 mangoes per day.
Stall A: Mean ≈ 21, Median = 21, Mode = 20, Range = 3
Stall B: 10, 25, 18, 30, 15, 28, 16
Comparison: Similar means, but Stall A is much more consistent (range 3 vs 20)!
Test scores for Learner X: 70, 75, 72, 74, 69
Test scores for Learner Y: 85, 60, 75, 90, 55
Calculate all four statistics for each learner, then compare!
Learner X: Mean = 72, Median = 72, Mode = None, Range = 6
Learner Y: Mean = 73, Median = 75, Mode = None, Range = 35
Comparison: Both have similar averages, but Learner X is very consistent (range = 6) while Learner Y is inconsistent (range = 35) - some very high scores, some very low.
Range matters when:
Use all four for complete analysis!
Where is range used?
Watch out for:
Take time to check your work! ✓
Today we learned:
Tomorrow's lesson: We will learn about probability - the chance of events happening!
What is probability?
New topic, exciting concepts!
Assignment:
Complete analysis practice: Shop A prices: 1500, 1600, 1500, 1700, 1500, 1800 shillings Shop B prices: 1200, 1800, 1500, 2000, 1400, 1600 shillings
For each shop, calculate: mean, median, mode, range Compare the shops - which is better for buying? Why?
Real data collection: Collect data (at least 7 values):
Calculate all four statistics and write what they tell you
Reflection: Explain why range is important. Give a real-life example.
Expected time: 30 minutes
Click to begin the narrated lesson
Range and Data Analysis