Mean, Median & Mode
These three 'measures of central tendency' summarise a data set in a single representative number, and CTET tests both the computation and which average to use. The mean (arithmetic average) is the sum of all observations divided by their number — it uses every value, so it is pulled towards extreme values (outliers). The median is the middle value once the data are arranged in order: for an odd count it is the single central value; for an even count it is the average of the two middle values — a step candidates routinely forget, so the data MUST be ordered first. The mode is the value that occurs most often; a set may have one mode, more than one, or none, and it is the only average that works for purely categorical data (most popular colour). The classic CTET pedagogy item: which average is 'best'? When data has extreme outliers (a few very high salaries, one zero score), the median is more representative than the mean. Children's misconceptions worth knowing: thinking the median is just the middle of the unordered list, forgetting to divide by the count for the mean, and confusing mode (most frequent) with the maximum value.
✅ Solved examples
✏️ Practice — try these, take hints as needed
📝 Topic test — 8 questions
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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° |