yes it is always
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That is pure rubbish. The mean and median score for a throw of a die are 3.5 But there are not many dice with a face value of 3.5!
The mode must be - always.
The range often is not.
If the height of adult males ranges in height from a minimum of 1.5 metres to a maximum of 2.0 metres, then the range is 0.5 metres. However, the fact that the minimum is 1.5 m implies there is no male with a height of 0.5 m. So, the range is not part of the data set.
the median and mode are but the mean is not
The mode, median, and range of a single data point such as 65 are all the data point itself, 65 in this instance.
Yea
Analyzing the mean, median, and range of your experimental data helps establish patters present in the data set. Analyzing the mean will define the quantitative average, analyzing the median will find the number that is center most, and analyzing the range will find the difference between the largest and smallest number in the data set. Good luck!
No.
the median and mode are but the mean is not
The mode, median, and range of a single data point such as 65 are all the data point itself, 65 in this instance.
Yea
Analyzing the mean, median, and range of your experimental data helps establish patters present in the data set. Analyzing the mean will define the quantitative average, analyzing the median will find the number that is center most, and analyzing the range will find the difference between the largest and smallest number in the data set. Good luck!
No.
No, not always. Median is the number that's in the middle of a group of numerical data. Mean is just the average of a set of numbers, which isn't always in the middle.
Mean: 11 Median: 11 Mode: 4 Range: 18
The mean, the median, the mode and the upper and lower limits of the range would each be reduced by the amount subtracted.
28, 30, 31, 31, 32 Mean: 30.4 Median: 31 Mode: 31 Range: 4
These terms apply to a set of data: mode: to the most common number (the number that appears most often) median: the middle number mean: The sum of all the data divided by the number of data items present. range: the difference between the largest and smallest values of data
No, not all data sets have a mode but all data sets have a mean and median.
The three central tendencies are mean, median and mode. Sometimes mid-range is used. Mean, arithmetic mean, add all the data and divided by the number of pieces of data. Median is the middle number when all the data is arranged in order. The average of the two middle pieces of data is you have an even number of data. Mode is the data that appears the most. Mid-range is the average of the least and greatest pieces of data.