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Box plots

Box plots

Box plots are a useful graphical representation of a five-number summary for describing, illustrating and comparing the distribution of large data sets.

Box plots provide a five-number summary for a data set. They include:

  • the median, which has equal numbers of ordered observations on each side of it
  • the first and third quartiles divide the halves of the ordered data set into halves again
  • the overall range of the data from minimum to maximum provides information about the spread of the whole data set.

The interquartile range (IQR) represents the middle 50% of the data. The IQR extends from the first quartile to the third quartile.

 

 

Box plots are most useful for representing the spread of large sets of data, but provide no information on the number of observations represented. They can also be used to compare multiple data sets.

The article Box Plots in the Australian Curriculum provides an introduction to box plots and to contexts within which their use can be meaningful.

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Name Class Section
Document Predicting AFL winners Folder 17
Document Year 10: Compare shapes of box plots to corresponding histograms and dot plots Infobox 3
Document Year 10: Construct and interpret box plots and use them to compare data sets Infobox 3
Document Source Infobox 3