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Relative Frequencies and Association | Lesson 2 of 2

Relative Frequencies and Association

You will be able to:

  • Compute three kinds of relative frequency
  • Use row percentages to detect association
  • Explain why association is not causation
Grade 8 Math | 8.SP.A.4
Relative Frequencies and Association | Lesson 2 of 2

Learning Objectives for This Lesson

By the end of this lesson, you will be able to:

  1. Compute relative frequencies for the grand total, rows, and columns
  2. Use row relative frequencies to detect association
  3. Interpret an association precisely in context
  4. Explain why association does not imply causation
Grade 8 Math | 8.SP.A.4
Relative Frequencies and Association | Lesson 2 of 2

Raw Counts Can Easily Mislead You

The breakfast-by-tired raw-count table carried over from the previous lesson

5 breakfast-eaters felt tired; 9 skippers felt tired. But the rows are 18 vs. 12.

Grade 8 Math | 8.SP.A.4
Relative Frequencies and Association | Lesson 2 of 2

Divide by the Row Total

  • Unequal group sizes make raw counts unfair
  • Fix: divide each cell by its row total
  • Now every row is on a 0-to-100% scale
Grade 8 Math | 8.SP.A.4
Relative Frequencies and Association | Lesson 2 of 2

Three Kinds of Relative Frequency

  • Grand-total: divide by everyone — share of all subjects
  • Row: divide by the row total — distribution within a row
  • Column: divide by the column total — distribution within a column
Grade 8 Math | 8.SP.A.4
Relative Frequencies and Association | Lesson 2 of 2

Relative to the Grand Total

Tired Not Tired Total
Breakfast 17% 43% 60%
No Breakfast 30% 10% 40%
Total 47% 53% 100%
Grade 8 Math | 8.SP.A.4
Relative Frequencies and Association | Lesson 2 of 2

Relative to the Row Total

Tired Not Tired Total
Breakfast 28% 72% 100%
No Breakfast 75% 25% 100%
Grade 8 Math | 8.SP.A.4
Relative Frequencies and Association | Lesson 2 of 2

Compare Rows to Detect Association

Row relative frequency table with the tired column highlighted across both rows

28% of breakfast-eaters tired vs. 75% of skippers — a big gap means association.

Grade 8 Math | 8.SP.A.4
Relative Frequencies and Association | Lesson 2 of 2

Quick Check: Is This Association?

Row percentages for "tired": 28% for breakfast-eaters, 75% for skippers.

Does this gap suggest an association? Decide and say why.

Grade 8 Math | 8.SP.A.4
Relative Frequencies and Association | Lesson 2 of 2

Relative to the Column Total

Tired Not Tired
Breakfast 36% 81%
No Breakfast 64% 19%
Total 100% 100%
Grade 8 Math | 8.SP.A.4
Relative Frequencies and Association | Lesson 2 of 2

Row and Column Are Not the Same

  • "80% of curfew students have chores" — divide by curfew students
  • "80% of chore students have curfew" — divide by chore students
  • Different denominators → different numbers
Grade 8 Math | 8.SP.A.4
Relative Frequencies and Association | Lesson 2 of 2

Practice the Move: Sport and Subject

Prefer Math Prefer Reading Total
Play Sport 80% 20% 100%
No Sport 40% 60% 100%
Grade 8 Math | 8.SP.A.4
Relative Frequencies and Association | Lesson 2 of 2

No Association Looks Like This

Has Pet No Pet Total
Left-Handed 60% 40% 100%
Right-Handed 60% 40% 100%
Grade 8 Math | 8.SP.A.4
Relative Frequencies and Association | Lesson 2 of 2

Small Differences Are Likely Chance

  • 52% vs. 48% is a tiny gap — probably random
  • Like 11 heads in 20 coin flips
  • Look for substantial differences, not tiny ones
Grade 8 Math | 8.SP.A.4
Relative Frequencies and Association | Lesson 2 of 2

We Found an Association — Now What?

We saw breakfast and tiredness are associated.

But does skipping breakfast cause tiredness?

Grade 8 Math | 8.SP.A.4
Relative Frequencies and Association | Lesson 2 of 2

Association Is Not the Same as Causation

  • Association: the variables are related in the data
  • Causation: one variable directly produces the other
  • A two-way table shows association, not causation
Grade 8 Math | 8.SP.A.4
Relative Frequencies and Association | Lesson 2 of 2

Lurking Variables Can Explain Both

Cause diagram with a lurking variable sending arrows to both observed variables

  • A hidden third factor can drive both variables
  • It creates association with no direct cause between them
Grade 8 Math | 8.SP.A.4
Relative Frequencies and Association | Lesson 2 of 2

A Clear Example With Umbrellas

Got Wet Stayed Dry Total
Umbrella 30% 70% 100%
No Umbrella 80% 20% 100%
Grade 8 Math | 8.SP.A.4
Relative Frequencies and Association | Lesson 2 of 2

Interpret With Careful, Precise Language

Use this template:

"Students who [A] are more/less likely to [B] than those who [not A]. This suggests an association between [variable 1] and [variable 2]."

Grade 8 Math | 8.SP.A.4
Relative Frequencies and Association | Lesson 2 of 2

Your Turn: Row vs. Column

A table shows: 80% of curfew students have chores.

Does that mean 80% of chore-having students have a curfew? Explain.

Grade 8 Math | 8.SP.A.4
Relative Frequencies and Association | Lesson 2 of 2

Your Turn: Find the Causal Error

A headline says: "Owning a dog causes people to exercise more."

  1. What is the logical error?
  2. Propose a lurking variable

Fix the claim before advancing.

Grade 8 Math | 8.SP.A.4
Relative Frequencies and Association | Lesson 2 of 2

Your Turn: A Full Analysis

A two-way table of data is given.

  1. Compute the row relative frequencies
  2. Decide whether there is association
  3. Write an interpretation sentence

Do all three on your own first.

Grade 8 Math | 8.SP.A.4
Relative Frequencies and Association | Lesson 2 of 2

Detect Association, Then Resist Causation

✓ Rescale rows to percentages, then compare a column across rows
✓ Different percentages → association; equal → none
✓ Association is not causation — mind lurking variables

Grade 8 Math | 8.SP.A.4
Relative Frequencies and Association | Lesson 2 of 2

Coming Up Next: Conditional Probability

In high school, this row comparison becomes conditional probability — the chance of one event given another — and the formal test for whether two events are independent.

Grade 8 Math | 8.SP.A.4