A set of cards, to be double sided, with statistical data and assorted good/bad/rubbish ways of representing the data.
Some of it from old exam papers, other from real data.
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I like the idea and a good range of diagrams. However, I would call the frequency diagrams, frequency polygons, and the 'scatter graphs' are NOT scatter graphs. (Scatter graphs compare two sets of numerical data that can be plotter as co-ordinate pairs - and not the frequency of categories. Further, scatter graphs never have points joined 'in order'.)
colinbillett
8 years ago
I think this resource might have had it's day - it is getting a bit old. I copied it from exam questions, and clearly language has changed. Why not take it as an old example, and update it yourself? Feel free to do so. Incidentally, I was once told off after an observation for asking how the data might be different now - apparently the observer thought 'thinking' was not part of the task, nor should be so.<br />
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looks good but for the first group of data, the line graph and the scatter graph look kind of the same, i've just edited the latter to take the black lines away leaving the points behind
Empty reply does not make any sense for the end user