The Line Is a Model, Not the Data
- Real data are messy — points scatter around the trend
- The line smooths out that noise
- Some points sit above it, some below, a few far off
Why Doesn't the Line Hit Every Point?
If the line is a good model, why does it miss most of the dots?
Think about what the line is for before the next slide.
Criterion 1: The Line Follows the Trend
- The line slopes the same direction as the data
- Upward for a positive association
- Downward for a negative association
Criterion 2: Balanced Above and Below
- Roughly equal points above and below
- Of 16 points: about 8 above, 8 below
Criterion 3: Close to the Points
- The points should sit near the line
- Small total distance from points to line
- Closeness is judged as a whole, not point by point
Many Lines Can Be Good
- There is no single exact line when we fit by eye
- Several lines can satisfy all three criteria
- "Best fit" here means reasonable, not unique
Fitting the Study-Hours Data Line
Observe the trend, position the line through the middle, check closeness, draw.
Verify the Balance by Counting
- Count the points above the line
- Count the points below the line
- Adjust the line until the counts are close
How Many Points Should Sit Above?
You drew a line through 16 points. Roughly how many should be above it?
Decide your number, then advance.
Must the Line Touch Data Points?
- Through-points line: hits two dots, ignores the rest
- Balanced line: touches none, fits all
Watch Out for Outliers Pulling the Line
- A line pulled to the extremes misses the bulk
- Count: 14 below, 2 above — not balanced
- Tilt toward the middle of the data
Which Criterion Does This Line Break?
A nearly flat line is drawn through the upward study-hours data.
- It does not follow the upward trend
- Which of the three criteria fails first?
Which of These Two Lines Fits Better?
Two lines are drawn on the same scatter plot:
- Line A follows the trend and balances the points
- Line B is steep and leaves most points below it
Pick the better fit and justify it with a criterion.
Your Turn: Draw and Defend
A fresh scatter plot is given with a clear positive association.
- Draw your own line of best fit
- Write which criteria you used to place it
Commit to your line alone first, then compare with a partner.
Three Common Line-Fitting Traps to Avoid
Through the points: the line models the trend, not individual dots
One exact line: several reasonable lines can all be good
Chasing outliers: balance to the middle, not the extremes
What a Fitted Line Really Is
✓ A model: a deliberate straight-line summary of a trend
✓ Good fit: follows the trend, balances points, stays close
✓ Several reasonable lines can fit the same data
Coming Up Next: Assessing and Using Lines
Next lesson, you will judge how good your line is, learn when a line should not be drawn at all, and turn the line into an equation you can compute with.
Click to begin the narrated lesson
Know that straight lines are widely used to model relationships between two quantitative variables