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Published byMay Cain Modified over 9 years ago
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Line (a lot of data, often involving time) › Used when there may be a trend or pattern Age versus Height Bar (counting) › Used for somewhat unrelated items Number of Dog, Cats and Fish as pets Pie (if a total is involved) › Used to show how one thing is part of a whole thing Percent of votes in an election (Part/Whole) * 100%
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Independent Variable › What the scientist picks › What the scientist can control Type of droppers, I could have used a turkey baster or snot sucker Dependant Variable › The result of the independent variable The number of drops DEPENDED of which dropper we used
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Scale › MUST be equal EVERY line MUST mean something 2, 4, 5, 1.2 Doesn’t matter as long as you keep it the same Can be altered ONCE using a ‘break’ across the axis The break is usually a diagonal equal sign or a heartbeat (see examples above) ONLY used if there is a LARGE gap in ALL the data › To Find your scale Figure out how much data you have then, count the amount of space you have and divide: Example: 39 drops of water was the most so go to 40 I have 11 lines to fit it on my graph 40 ÷ 11 = 3.64 If I go by 3.8 or 4 it will fit well
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Line Graphs follow the same basic rules as bar graphs. Can have multiple lines. Line doesn’t always have to start at zero.
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Pie Graphs › Data is shown as a percent of a whole. To Calculate Percent › Find the part you want › Divide it by the total › Take that answer and multiply it by 100
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Calculation Example: › 68 people voted › Marcia got 25 votes › Sam got 31 votes and › Ian got the rest
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