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Make a box-and-whisker plot of the data.
42, 29, 36, 38, 36, 36, 38, 30, 27, 33, 41, 39, 29, 37, 36


THANKS

SNOW DAY!!!!! NO SCHOOL!!! WHOO-HOO!!!!!

2006-10-23 01:07:11 · 3 answers · asked by Jesus Freak!!! 3 in Education & Reference Homework Help

I live in Alaska...dir...

2006-10-23 02:33:43 · update #1

3 answers

what happened to living PA????????

And if u r home schooled like u said before, do u really have snow days???????

Ask your mom to elp u make a box-and-whisker plot...she is your teacher....

2006-10-27 00:16:36 · answer #1 · answered by Lorraine 3 · 0 0

Interquartile decision is the version between the right end of the field (no longer the right whisker) and the left end of the field. The "larger severe" refers back to the right whisker the Median is the line in the technique the field so the better is the single which replaced into positioned over the better style (or farther for your accurate) The low severe is the left whisker. Now... if you're actually not given any scale and no numbers you ought to do it by technique of evaluating them, in basic terms positioned one over the different and be conscious which field looks more advantageous for A, for B which accurate whisker is going farther, for C which line in the technique the packing boxes is farther to the right and for D which left whisker is longer.

2016-12-05 03:23:54 · answer #2 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

I don't think I've ever heard of a snow day in October, but have fun!

A box and whisker plot basically shows the following information on a number line:

* the minimum value (left "whisker")
* the median (middle of "box" ... median is exact center of data when you arrange them from smallest to largest)
* the maximum value (right "whisker")
* lower quartile (Q1 ... left side of "box" ... you find this by just looking at the bottom half of the numbers--everything below the median--and finding the median of just those numbers)
* upper quartile (Q3 ... right side of "box" ... you find this by just looking at the top half of the numbers--everything above the median--and finding the median of just those numbers)

If you have a graphing calculator, just enter your data and go to STAT - CALC - 1Var. The last stuff it will give you is the 5-number summary, which is exactly what you need to make a box and whisket plot.

2006-10-23 01:44:13 · answer #3 · answered by dmb 5 · 0 0

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