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Pie Charts Adapted from MrBartonMaths.com.

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Presentation on theme: "Pie Charts Adapted from MrBartonMaths.com."— Presentation transcript:

1 Pie Charts Adapted from MrBartonMaths.com

2 Pie Charts Example A group of 72 maths teachers were asked to choose their favourite alcoholic drink from a list, their responses are shown in the column on the right. Construct a pie chart to illustrate this information. Drink Total Lager 12 Bitter 10 Stout 4 Wine 15 Vodka & Tonic 13 Whiskey & Coke 18

3 1. Working out the Angles Before you can start to draw the pie chart, you need to know how big a slice each of the choices is going to take up – in other words, you need to know the angle of each segment. To work this out, you need to remember that there are 360 degrees in a circle. That means there are 360 degrees to share between each of the people who took part in the survey. How many degrees does each person get?... Divide 360 by the number of people surveyed! To Calculate the Angles 1. Add up the total number of pieces of data. 2. Divide 360 by this number – this tells you how many degrees are allocated to each piece of data. 3. To work out the size of angle for each category, multiply the answer to 2. by the number of people in each category – rounding your answers sensibly if you need to. 4. Check: Before you start to draw, make sure you check that your total number of degrees does add up to 360!

4 1. So, we have a total of 72 teachers who were surveyed.
Our Example: 1. So, we have a total of 72 teachers who were surveyed. ÷ 72 = 5 So… each teacher is worth 5 degrees on our pie chart. 3. We know how many teachers are in each segment, so let’s use our answer to 2. to work out what angle each segment gets. Drink Total Working Out Angle of Segment Lager 12 12 x 5 = 60 600 Bitter 10 10 x 5 = 50 500 Stout 4 4 x 5 = 20 200 Wine 15 15 x 5 = 75 750 Vodka & Tonic 13 13 x 5 = 65 650 Whiskey & Coke 18 18 x 5 = 90 900 Remember: Check this column adds up to 360 before you move on!

5 2. Drawing the Pie Chart You’ve done all the hard work, and drawing the pie chart should be easy… but you’ll be amazed how many people mess it up, so take your time and follow these steps… 1. Draw a circle using a compass. Mark the centre with a dot and draw a straight line from the centre up to the right of your circle. 2. Carefully place your angle measurer along the line, with the centre exactly on the centre of the circle. Now, count around from 0 until you reach the correct number of degrees – in this case 600 – and place a dot .

6 3. Join up your dot to the centre with a straight line and label your segment.
Lager 4. Now, this is the tricky bit… turn your pie chart clockwise until your new line is horizontal (where the first line used to be). Now you can mark your next angle in exactly the same way. Lager Lager

7 5. Keep doing this until you have drawn all your segments
Check: You will know if you have got it right if the line to make your final segment is the very first line you drew! 6. You can colour in your segments if you want to, but you must remember to label them clearly, or add a key!

8 3. What CAN we tell from Pie Charts
Well, if you look back at our pie chart, you will see that it shows pretty clearly that Whiskey & Coke was the most popular choice amongst our maths teachers, whereas Stout was the least popular If you want to be really fancy, you might be able to say things like: “Roughly 3 times as many teachers preferred Lager to Stout.” 4. What CAN’T we tell from Pie Charts Imagine we were just given our pie chart (and no original data), and someone said: “how many maths teachers said that Wine was their favourite drink?”, what would we say? Well, probably not a lot, because there is no way of knowing! You might remember this is different to bar charts where the horizontal axis gives us this answer Unless we are told how many people were surveyed all together, we cannot answer that question! When making statements based on Pie Charts, just make sure that what you are saying is definitely, 100% true!

9 240 Maths teachers were asked “what is your favourite soft drink?”.
5. Interpreting Pie Charts Big Example 2 240 Maths teachers were asked “what is your favourite soft drink?”. Work out how many teachers preferred coffee. Tea Coffee J20 Squash Milk Water 108o 84o 60o 48o 36o 24o We must do the opposite of what we did when we were drawing the pie chart – we must use our angles to find our totals! Let’s look at coffee, it takes up 840 out of 3600, and what we want to know is “How much does it take up of our 240 people?” Multiply both sides by 240 So, turning to our calculator, we get an answer of… 56 people


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