Comparing Data Sets

In a Nutshell

To compare two data sets, use an average (mean, median or mode) to compare a typical value and the range to compare how spread out the data is.

When comparing two data sets — for example, test scores from two classes — you need two things:

  1. An average (mean, median or mode) to compare where the data is centred — which group did better on average?
  2. The range to compare how spread out the data is — which group was more consistent?

For example, if Class A has a higher mean but also a larger range, you might say: "On average Class A scored higher, but Class B was more consistent."

Always state your comparisons in context — refer to what the data actually represents, not just the numbers.

Change the data set below to explore how the averages and range differ between Set A and Set B.

Averages and range visualiser A dot plot showing each data value. Annotations mark the mean, median, mode and range on the diagram.

Watch it work

Question: Two classes sit the same test (out of 50).

Class A: 32,45,28,41,3932, 45, 28, 41, 39
Class B: 35,37,36,34,3835, 37, 36, 34, 38

Compare the two classes.

Have a go

Q1. Team X has a mean score of 14 and a range of 8. Team Y has a mean score of 12 and a range of 3. Which team is better on average? Which is more consistent?

Q2. Set P: 5,5,5,5,55, 5, 5, 5, 5. Set Q: 1,3,5,7,91, 3, 5, 7, 9. Find the mean and range of each set and compare them.

Q3. Ali's last 5 homework scores: 7,8,6,9,57, 8, 6, 9, 5. Ben's last 5 homework scores: 7,7,7,7,77, 7, 7, 7, 7. Who should the teacher be more concerned about? Use averages and range to explain.

Q4. Why is it not enough to compare only the means of two data sets?