In this lesson:
By the end of this unit, you should be able to:
Can you place a single number on a number line?
Ms. Johnson's class measured resting heart rates (beats per minute):
68, 72, 72, 74, 76, 76, 76, 78, 80, 80, 82, 84, 88, 90, 92
Can one picture show every value — and where the class clusters?
Put each heart rate as a dot on a number line:
Two students share a value? Stack the dots. That's the whole trick.
One dot per value; stacked dots show how often a value repeats.
For the fifteen heart rates:
Line every dot up exactly — a drifting dot misreports the data.
Using the dot plot of the fifteen heart rates:
Commit to both answers before advancing.
Family reunion ages: 8, 10, 10, 12, 35, 38, 40, 42, 70
Build the whole plot, then describe what you see.
The dot plot showed all 15 heart rates clearly.
Now imagine 600 heart rates on the same line:
Too many values to show one at a time. We need to group them.
A histogram sorts values into equal-width intervals called bins.
You give up individual values to gain a clear view of the shape.
Sixty customers' spending, grouped into $20 bins:
The bin [50, 70) includes $50 but stops just short of $70.
Bar height = bin count, and the bars touch — no gaps.
The bins are adjacent intervals on one continuous number line.
Touching bars show continuity — a gap would claim a value is impossible.
From the Black Friday histogram:
This shape is a slight right skew — and a list of 60 numbers couldn't show it.
Two displays of the same customers:
Which display has gaps between its bars? Decide before advancing.
Aim for 5–10 bins for most data sets.
Look back at the two Black Friday histograms.
Pick the bin width you'd report — and be ready to say why.
A student graphed continuous temperature data like this:
What rule does this break, and how would you fix it?
Fifty quiz scores ranging from 40 to 100.
Then describe the shape in one sentence.
Dot plot: forgetting to stack repeats hides the frequency Histogram: gaps between bars means you drew a bar graph Bins: too wide and the shape disappears
Each turns a correct idea into a wrong picture.
✓ Dot plot: every value, best for small sets ✓ Histogram: overall shape, best for large sets ✓ Same number line — different question
Next lesson: the box plot compresses data into five numbers for comparison.
Click to begin the narrated lesson
Represent data with plots