Tally Marks
Tally marks are the simplest counting tool in data handling, a single vertical stroke for each item counted. Their strength is live counting: while surveying friends or watching cars go by, you just add one stroke as each event happens, with no need to keep a running total in your head. The convention CTET tests cold is grouping in fives. For counts one to four you draw vertical strokes side by side; for the fifth count you do not add a fifth vertical line, you draw a diagonal stroke across the previous four, making a bundle (often called a gate) that stands for exactly five. New counts start a fresh bundle. To read a tally, count the complete bundles and multiply by five, then add the leftover single strokes (which can only be one to four). Three full bundles and three extra strokes are (3 x 5) + 3 = 18. The single most common error, and a favourite CTET trap, is treating the diagonal line as a separate sixth mark; it is part of the five, not an addition. Other errors children make are drawing the fifth line horizontally, putting six verticals before crossing, or not crossing all four. The reverse skill matters too: to show a frequency of 13 as tally marks you draw two complete bundles (10) and three single strokes. Tally marks connect naturally to pictographs, the idea that one stroke equals one item leads straight to one picture equals one (or several) items, so teaching them well sets up the next topics.
✅ Solved examples
✏️ Practice — try these, take hints as needed
📝 Topic test — 8 questions
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Key Concepts — Quick Reference
Tally marks and counting in fives
| One stroke | | = 1 (a single vertical line for each item) |
|---|---|
| Bundle of five | 4 vertical strokes + 1 diagonal across them = 5 |
| Reading a tally | (complete bundles x 5) + leftover single strokes |
| Frequency | the total count for one category = sum of its tally marks |
Pictograph key and reading bar graphs
| Pictograph key/scale | 1 symbol = a fixed number of items (e.g. 1 apple = 2 children) |
|---|---|
| Pictograph value | (number of full symbols x key) + (half symbol = half the key) |
| Bar graph value | trace the top of the bar across to the scale axis and read it off |
| How many more | larger frequency - smaller frequency (subtract the two values) |