* #6: Don't use pie charts for more than 3-5 categories.
Human eyes struggle to compare angles and areas. When a pie chart has many slices, small differences become impossible to assess accurately.
* :
· Use a bar chart for exact comparisons
· Use a stacked bar chart for part-to-whole relationships
· Use a table if precise values matter most
Example: Viewer accuracy for comparing proportions drops from ~95% with bars to ~50% with pie slices.
Metro Math
Math in your path
📊 STATISTICS QUICK TIP #5
Longitudinal Studies: Follow Over Time
Same subjects studied repeatedly over period.
👉 Why it matters: Can observe development and long-term effects.
Example: Following children from birth to adulthood to study development.
Takeaway: Powerful but time-consuming and expensive.
Education is the tool for fearless life
📊 STATISTICS QUICK TIP #4
Random Sampling: The Gold Standard
Every member of population has equal chance of being selected.
👉 Why it matters: Reduces bias, makes results more generalizable.
Example: Political polling: calling random phone numbers vs only asking your friends.
Takeaway: Non-random samples can give misleading results.
08/01/2026
📊 STATISTICS QUICK TIP #3
Sample vs Population
Population: Entire group you want to study
Sample: Subset you actually study
👉 Why it matters: We usually study samples to make inferences about populations.
Example: Want to know average height of all adults? Measure a sample of 1,000 adults.
Takeaway: A good sample should represent the population.
06/01/2026
📊 STATISTICS QUICK TIP #2
The Bell Curve (Normal Distribution)
Most data clusters around an average with symmetrical tails.
👉 Why it matters: Many natural phenomena follow this (heights, test scores). Knowing this helps predict probabilities.
Example: Adult heights - most around average, few very short or tall.
Takeaway: When data is normally distributed, we can make powerful predictions!
Good Luck!
STATISTICS QUICK TIP #1
Know Your “Average”!
Did you know there are 3 common types of "average"?
1. Mean: Add all numbers, divide by how many.
2. Median: The middle number when sorted.
3. Mode: The most frequent number.
👉 Why it matters:
If your data has a few extreme values, the mean can be misleading. The median often tells a fairer story.
Example: Salaries in a company. One CEO's high salary can raise the mean significantly, but the median shows what most employees actually earn.
Simple takeaway: Next time you see “average,” ask: Which one?
Good luck
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