IM 6.8.5 Lesson: Using Dot Plots to Answer Statistical Questions
This dot plot shows the weights of backpacks, in kilograms, of 50 sixth-grade students at a school in New Zealand.
The dot plot shows several dots at 0 kilograms. What could a value of 0 mean in this context?
Clare and Tyler studied the dot plot.
Do you agree with either of them? Explain your reasoning.
Twenty-five sixth-grade students were asked to estimate how many hours a week they spend talking on the phone. This dot plot represents their reported number of hours of phone usage per week.
How many of the students reported not talking on the phone during the week? Explain how you know.
What percentage of the students reported not talking on the phone?
What is the largest number of hours a student spent talking on the phone per week?
What percentage of the group reported talking on the phone for this amount of time?
How many hours would you say that these students typically spend talking on the phone?
How many minutes per day would that be?
How would you describe the spread of the data? Would you consider these students’ amounts of time on the phone to be alike or different? Explain your reasoning.
Here is the dot plot from an earlier activity. It shows the number of hours per week the same group of 25 sixth-grade students reported spending on homework.
Overall, are these students more alike in the amount of time they spend talking on the phone or in the amount of time they spend on homework? Explain your reasoning.
Suppose someone claimed that these sixth-grade students spend too much time on the phone. Do you agree? Use your analysis of the dot plot to support your answer.
A keyboarding teacher wondered: “Do typing speeds of students improve after taking a keyboarding course?”
Explain why her question is a statistical question.
Based on the dot plots, do you agree with each of the following statements about this group of students?
Overall, how fast would you say that the students typed after completing the course? What would you consider the center of the end-of-course data?
Use one of these suggestions (or make up your own). Research to create a dot plot with at least 10 values.
Use one of these suggestions (or make up your own). Research to create a dot plot with at least 10 values. Then, describe the center and spread of the distribution.