Introduction to statistics
Across
- 3. This data is all about putting things into groups or categories, like sorting your toys into bins based on their types.
- 5. This data comes from measuring things, such as your height, where you can have any number within a range, even fractions.
- 7. Information that you collect yourself, such as asking your friends what their favourite ice cream flavour is and writing down their answers.
- 9. This statistic is the number that appears the most in your data, like the most popular ice cream flavour in your class.
- 10. A collection of facts, numbers, or information that helps us understand things better, such as keeping track of your favourite colours or how many friends you have.
- 11. The statistic is the difference between the biggest and smallest numbers in your data, like the range of heights in a soccer team is the height of the tallest player and then subtract the height of the smallest player.
Down
- 1. A special number that helps us learn more from our data, like finding the average (mean) of your test scores or the most common answer in a survey (mode).
- 2. This data comes from counting numbers, such as the number of marbles you have, and you can't have a fraction of a marble.
- 4. This is data about numbers, such as your age, the price of your favourite chocolate, or the temperature outside.
- 6. Information that others have collected, like looking up how many people in your city like soccer in a book or on the internet.
- 8. This statistic is the middle number when your numbers are in order, or if there's an even number of them, it's the average of the two middle numbers.
- 9. This statistic is the average number you get by adding up all your numbers and dividing by how many numbers there are.