Skewed Data Earns the Median
- A long right tail of high earners pulls the mean up
- The median and IQR honestly describe a typical household
Outliers Also Earn the Median
A box plot of marathon times has one very slow finisher flagged as an outlier.
- That extreme value would inflate the mean and the SD
Report the median and IQR — the resistant pair:
Skew or an outlier → median and IQR, every time.
Why the Mean Sits Above the Median
In a right-skewed distribution, the long tail pulls the mean up.
- Mean reflects the few high earners
- Median reflects the many typical households
The bigger the skew, the larger the gap — and the more the mean misleads.
Quick Check: Name the Pair
For each shape, name the statistic pair:
- Symmetric, bell-like histogram of heights
- Strongly right-skewed home prices
- Data with one flagged outlier
Decide all three, then advance.
Answers: 1) mean and SD (symmetric); 2) median and IQR (skewed); 3) median and IQR (outlier).
Comparing Two Groups Needs One Rule
To compare one distribution you choose a pair. To compare two, add one rule:
- Both groups must use the same pair
- Comparing one group's mean to another's median is meaningless
Read each shape, pick a pair that fits both, then compare center and spread.
Compare Two Quiz Classes Fairly
Both symmetric, so use mean and SD:
- Class A: mean 82, SD 6
- Class B: mean 76, SD 11
A Comparison Is Two Sentences
For Class A versus Class B:
- Center: Class A's mean is higher — 82 vs 76
- Spread: Class B is more variable — SD 11 vs 6
Both findings matter: Class A is uniformly solid; Class B has high and low extremes.
Predict: Same Center, Different Spread
Two groups have the same median of 50.
- Group 1: small IQR — scores packed near 50
- Group 2: large IQR — scores spread widely
Are these two groups the same?
Commit to an answer, then advance.
A Complete Comparison Needs Both
The groups are not the same — only the spread distinguishes them.
- Same center, but one is reliable and one is volatile
- Comparing center alone would call them equal — and be wrong
A complete comparison always states center and spread.
When One Set Is Skewed
Comparing a skewed set with a symmetric one? The same-pair rule holds.
- The skewed set demands median and IQR
- So both sets use median and IQR
If either set is skewed, the resistant pair wins.
The Method Scales to Three Groups
- Compare centers by lining up the medians
- Compare spreads by box widths and whiskers
Two groups or ten — same method.
Your Turn: Compare Two Teams
Both roughly symmetric, both mean 80:
- Team X: mean 80, SD 4
- Team Y: mean 80, SD 12
Write a center sentence and a spread sentence, then advance.
Answer: Centers equal (both 80). Team Y is far more variable (SD 12 vs 4); Team X is more consistent.
Full Task: Judge, Choose, Compare
Given two real data sets:
- Judge each shape
- Choose one matched pair for both
- Compute it for each set
- Write a two-sentence comparison
Do the whole task unaided, then advance.
Answer: Skewed → median/IQR for both; symmetric → mean/SD. Two sentences, in context.
Key Takeaways From This Lesson
✓ Shape first: symmetric → mean/SD; skewed → median/IQR
✓ Compare groups with the same matched pair
✓ Report center and spread
A skewed set forces median/IQR for all groups
Naming only the center is incomplete
Next: what these differences mean, and handling outliers.
Click to begin the narrated lesson
Compare center and spread of data sets