Chapter-2-Methods of Data Presentation
Chapter-2-Methods of Data Presentation
CHAPTER 2
Having collected and edited the data, the next important step is to organize
it. That is to present it in a readily comprehensible condensed form that aids
in order to draw inferences from it. It is also necessary that the like be
separated from the unlike ones.
Tabular presentation
Diagrammatic and Graphic presentation.
Definitions:
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Lecture note Chapter 2 METHODS OF DATA PRESNTATION
Used for data that can be place in specific categories such as nominal, or
ordinal. e.g. marital status.
Example: a social worker collected the following data on marital status for 25
persons.(M=married, S=single, W=widowed, D=divorced)
M S D W D
S S M M M
W D S M M
W D D S S
S W W D D
Solution:
Since the data are categorical, discrete classes can be used. There are four types
of marital status M, S, D, and W. These types will be used as class for the
distribution. We follow procedure to construct the frequency distribution.
Step 2: Tally the data and place the result in column (2).
Step 3: Count the tally and place the result in column (3).
f
% * 100 Where f= frequency of the class, n=total number of value.
n
Percentages are not normally a part of frequency distribution but they can be
added since they are used in certain types diagrammatic such as pie charts.
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Lecture note Chapter 2 METHODS OF DATA PRESNTATION
Combing all the steps one can construct the following frequency distribution.
-Is a table of all the potential raw score values that could possible occur in the
data along with the number of times each actually occurred.
First find the smallest and largest raw score in the collected data.
Arrange the data in order of magnitude and count the frequency.
To facilitate counting one may include a column of tallies.
Example:
80 76 90 85 80
70 60 62 70 85
65 60 63 74 75
76 70 70 80 85
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Lecture note Chapter 2 METHODS OF DATA PRESNTATION
Solution:
-When the range of the data is large, the data must be grouped in to classes that
are more than one unit in width.
Definitions:
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Lecture note Chapter 2 METHODS OF DATA PRESNTATION
class. The lower class boundary is found by subtracting U/2 from the
corresponding lower class limit and the upper class boundary is found by
adding U/2 to the corresponding upper class limit.
Class width: the difference between the upper and lower class
boundaries of any class. It is also the difference between the lower limits
of any two consecutive classes or the difference between any two
consecutive class marks.
Class mark (Mid points): it is the average of the lower and upper class
limits or the average of upper and lower class boundary.
Cumulative frequency: is the number of observations less than/more
than or equal to a specific value.
Cumulative frequency above: it is the total frequency of all values
greater than or equal to the lower class boundary of a given class.
Cumulative frequency blow: it is the total frequency of all values less
than or equal to the upper class boundary of a given class.
Cumulative Frequency Distribution (CFD): it is the tabular
arrangement of class interval together with their corresponding
cumulative frequencies. It can be more than or less than type, depending
on the type of cumulative frequency used.
Relative frequency (rf): it is the frequency divided by the total
frequency.
Relative cumulative frequency (rcf): it is the cumulative frequency
divided by the total frequency.
Example*:
11 29 6 33 14 31 22 27 19 20
18 17 22 38 23 21 26 34 39 27
Solutions:
Step 1: Find the highest and the lowest value H=39, L=6
Step 6: Find the upper class limit; e.g. the first upper class=12-U=12-1=11
11, 17, 23, 29, 35, 41 are the upper class limits.
So combining step 5 and step 6, one can construct the following classes.
Class limits
6 – 11
12 – 17
18 – 23
24 – 29
30 – 35
36 – 41
Class boundary
5.5 – 11.5
11.5 – 17.5
17.5 – 23.5
23.5 – 29.5
29.5 – 35.5
35.5 – 41.5
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Lecture note Chapter 2 METHODS OF DATA PRESNTATION
Step 9: Write the numeric values for the tallies in the frequency column.
Class Class Class Tally Freq. Cf (less Cf (more rf. rcf (less
limit boundary Mark than than than type
type) type)
6 – 11 5.5 – 11.5 8.5 // 2 2 20 0.10 0.10
12 – 17 11.5 – 17.5 14.5 // 2 4 18 0.10 0.20
18 – 23 17.5 – 23.5 20.5 ////// 7 11 16 0.35 0.55
24 – 29 23.5 – 29.5 26.5 //// 4 15 9 0.20 0.75
30 – 35 29.5 – 35.5 32.5 /// 3 18 5 0.15 0.90
36 – 41 35.5 – 41.5 38.5 // 2 20 2 0.10 1.00
These are techniques for presenting data in visual displays using geometric and
pictures.
Importance:
-The three most commonly used diagrammatic presentation for discrete as well as
qualitative data are:
Pie charts
Pictogram
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Lecture note Chapter 2 METHODS OF DATA PRESNTATION
Bar charts
Pie chart
Valueofthepart
Angleof sec tor * 360
thewholequantity
Solutions:
Step 3: Using a protractor and compass, graph each section and write its name
corresponding percentage.
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Lecture note Chapter 2 METHODS OF DATA PRESNTATION
CLASS
Boys Men
Girls Women
Pictogram
Bar Charts:
- A set of bars (thick lines or narrow rectangles) representing some magnitude over
time space.
- They are useful for comparing aggregate over time space.
- Bars can be drawn either vertically or horizontally.
- There are different types of bar charts. The most common being :
Simple bar chart
Deviation or two way bar chart
Broken bar chart
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Lecture note Chapter 2 METHODS OF DATA PRESNTATION
Solutions:
30
25
Sales in $
20
15
10
5
0
A B C
product
Draw a component bar chart to represent the sales by product from 1957 to 1959.
Solutions:
100
80
Sales in $
Product C
60
Product B
40
Product A
20
0
1957 1958 1959
Year of production
Solutions:
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Lecture note Chapter 2 METHODS OF DATA PRESNTATION
60
50
Sales in $
40 Product A
30 Product B
20 Product C
10
0
1957 1958 1959
Year of production
Histogram
A graph which displays the data by using vertical bars of various height to
represent frequencies. Class boundaries are placed along the horizontal axes. Class
marks and class limits are some times used as quantity on the X axes.
Frequency Polygon:
- A line graph. The frequency is placed along the vertical axis and classes mid
points are placed along the horizontal axis. It is customer to the next higher and
lower class interval with corresponding frequency of zero, this is to make it a
complete polygon.
Example: Draw a frequency polygon for the above data (example *).
Solutions:
8
4
Value Frequency
0
2.5 8.5 14.5 20.5 26.5 32.5 38.5 44.5
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