Bar Graphs, Pie Charts & Histograms
Once data is tabled, it is pictured — and CTET cares that you match the right chart to the right data. A bar graph uses bars of equal width with gaps between them to compare separate (discrete, categorical) categories such as favourite sports or pupils per class; the bar height shows the frequency. A double bar graph compares two data sets side by side (boys vs girls, this year vs last). A histogram looks similar but is for continuous, grouped data (class intervals) and so has NO gaps between bars — the bars touch, because the intervals are continuous. This 'gap vs no-gap' distinction is a favourite CTET test point and a common student confusion. A pie chart (circle graph) shows how a whole is divided into parts, so it suits data expressed as parts of a total; each sector's angle is (value ÷ total) × 360°, and all the sectors add to 360°. Children's typical errors: leaving gaps in a histogram or removing them from a bar graph, reading the wrong axis, and forgetting that pie-chart sectors must sum to the whole (360° or 100%). NCERT places histograms and pie charts in Class 8 precisely because they need the prior ideas of grouped data and proportion.
✅ Solved examples
✏️ Practice — try these, take hints as needed
📝 Topic test — 8 questions
Auto-graded with full solutions; saved to your dashboard. Use the calculator and formula sheet (top-right) any time.
Key Concepts — Quick Reference
Measures of central tendency
| Mean (average) | Mean = (sum of all observations) ÷ (number of observations) |
|---|---|
| Median | Order the data; middle value. If n is even, mean of the two middle values |
| Mode | The observation that occurs most often (a data set can have more than one mode) |
| Range | Range = highest value − lowest value |
Probability & pie charts
| Probability of an event | P(E) = (number of favourable outcomes) ÷ (total number of outcomes) |
|---|---|
| Probability range | 0 ≤ P(E) ≤ 1 · impossible = 0, certain = 1 |
| Sum of all probabilities | P(E) + P(not E) = 1 |
| Pie-chart angle | Angle of a sector = (value ÷ total) × 360° |