Week 5 Engineering Data
Week 5 Engineering Data
Week 5 Engineering Data
Engineering
Data
Introduction
2
Class activity Activity response platform
3
Recap of last week’s lesson
4
Learning Outcome 1: Examine scientific data using
both quantitative and qualitative data
TODAYS OBJECTIVES
Let’s have a look at what we will be covering
today:
Describe data using graphs
Describe data using numerical measures
Describing Qualitative Data
Key Terms
A class is one of the categories into which qualitative data can be
classified.
The class frequency is the number of observations in the data set falling
into a particular class.
The class relative frequency is the class frequency divided by the total
numbers of observations in the data set.
The class percentage is the class relative frequency multiplied by 100.
Data Presentation
Data
Presentation
Qualitative Quantitative
Data Data
Data
Presentation
Qualitative Quantitative
Data Data
Percent Frequency or %
Used
Also
50
0
Acct. Econ. Mgmt.
Major Vertical Bars
Zero Point for Qualitative
Variables
Data Presentation
Data
Presentation
Qualitative Quantitative
Data Data
1. Shows breakdown of
Majors
total quantity into
categories Mgmt.
Econ. 25%
2. Useful for showing
relative differences 10% 36°
3. Angle size
• Acct.
(360°)(percent)
65%
(360°) (10%) = 36°
Data Presentation
Data
Presentation
Qualitative Quantitative
Data Data
Percent Frequency or %
Used
Also
50
0
Acct. Mgmt. Econ.
Major Vertical Bars
Zero Point for Qualitative
Variables
Summary
Bar graph: The categories (classes) of the qualitative
variable are represented by bars, where the height of
each bar is either the class frequency, class relative
frequency, or class percentage.
Pie chart: The categories (classes) of the qualitative
variable are represented by slices of a pie (circle). The
size of each slice is proportional to the class relative
frequency.
Pareto diagram: A bar graph with the categories
(classes) of the qualitative variable (i.e., the bars)
arranged by height in descending order from left to
right.
Task 1 (15 minutes)
You’re an analyst for BFC. You want to show the market
shares held by Web browsers in 2022. Construct a
1. Bar graph,
2. Pie chart,
3. Pareto diagram to describe the data.
Browser Mkt. Share (%)
Firefox 14
Internet Explorer 81
Safari 4
Chrome 18
Others 1
Graphical Methods for Describing
Quantitative Data
Data Presentation
Data
Presentation
Qualitative Quantitative
Data Data
Data
Presentation
Qualitative Quantitative
Data Data
Data
Presentation
Qualitative Quantitative
Data Data
1. Determine range
2. Select number of classes
• Usually between 5 & 15 inclusive
3. Compute class intervals (width)
4. Determine class boundaries (limits)
5. Compute class midpoints
6. Count observations & assign to classes
Frequency Distribution Table Example
Data
Presentation
Qualitative Quantitative
Data Data
Class Freq.
Count 15.5 – 25.5 3
5 25.5 – 35.5 5
35.5 – 45.5 2
Frequency 4
Relative 3
Frequency 2 Bars
Touch
Percent 1
0
0 15.5 25.5 35.5 45.5 55.5
Lower Boundary
Task 2 (15 minutes)
Raw Data: 15, 28 21, 31, 45, 37, 33, 21, 39, 30
Construct a histogram
25.5 – 35.5
35.5 – 45.5
Example 1.
Calculate the mean, range and standard deviation of the distribution in the
table below
Variable Frequency (X) X-
2 3 75 Sum of Variables = 762
3 8 128
No of samples = 108
4 10 90
5 12 48
6 16 16
Mean() = = 7
7 14 0
8 10 10
9 8 32 Sample Standard deviation =
10 17 153
11 5 80
12 4 100
13 1 36
108 768
=
Population Standard deviation
Variable Frequency
2 1
3 1
4 4
5 2
6 1
7 2
8 1
9 1
10 1
11 1
12 2