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Mathematics
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Learner’s Module
ED
Unit 4
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Education at action@deped.gov.ph.
Department of Education
Republic of the Philippines
All rights reserved. No part of this material may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means -
electronic or mechanical including photocopying – without written permission from the DepEd Central Office. First Edition, 2015.
Mathematics – Grade 10
Learner’s Module
First Edition 2015
Republic Act 8293, section 176 states that: No copyright shall subsist in any work
of the Government of the Philippines. However, prior approval of the government agency or
office wherein the work is created shall be necessary for exploitation of such work for profit.
Such agency or office may, among other things, impose as a condition the payment of
royalties.
Borrowed materials (i.e., songs, stories, poems, pictures, photos, brand names,
trademarks, etc.) included in this book are owned by their respective copyright holders.
DepEd is represented by the Filipinas Copyright Licensing Society (FILCOLS), Inc. in seeking
permission to use these materials from their respective copyright owners. All means have
been exhausted in seeking permission to use these materials. The publisher and authors do
not represent nor claim ownership over them.
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Only institution and companies which have entered an agreement with FILCOLS and
only within the agreed framework may copy this Learner’s Module. Those who have not
entered in an agreement with FILCOLS must, if they wish to copy, contact the publisher and
authors directly.
Authors and publishers may email or contact FILCOLS at filcols@gmail.com or (02)
439-2204, respectively.
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Published by the Department of Education
Secretary: Br. Armin A. Luistro FSC
Undersecretary: Dina S. Ocampo, PhD
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Development Team of the Learner’s Module
Consultants: Soledad A. Ulep, PhD, Debbie Marie B. Verzosa, PhD, and
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Rosemarievic Villena-Diaz, PhD
Authors: Melvin M. Callanta, Allan M. Canonigo, Arnaldo I. Chua, Jerry D. Cruz,
Mirla S. Esparrago, Elino S. Garcia, Aries N. Magnaye, Fernando B. Orines,
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electronic or mechanical including photocopying – without written permission from the DepEd Central Office. First Edition, 2015.
Introduction
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finalization with the guidance of the consultants.
Module 1 – Sequences
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Module 2 – Polynomials and Polynomial Equations
Module 3 – Polynomial Functions
Module 4 – Circles
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Module 5 – Plane Coordinate Geometry
Module 6 – Permutations and Combinations
Module 7 – Probability of Compound Events
Module 8 – Measures of Position
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With the different activities provided in every module, may you find this
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electronic or mechanical including photocopying – without written permission from the DepEd Central Office. First Edition, 2015.
Table of Contents
Unit 4
Module 8: Measures of Position ............................................................ 355
Lessons and Coverage ........................................................................ 357
Module Map ......................................................................................... 357
Pre-Assessment .................................................................................. 358
Learning Goals and Targets ................................................................ 361
Lesson 1: Measures of Position for Ungrouped Data ................................ 362
Activity 1 .................................................................................... 362
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Activity 2 .................................................................................... 363
Activity 3 .................................................................................... 363
Activity 4 .................................................................................... 364
Activity 5 .................................................................................... 369
Activity 6 .................................................................................... 371
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Activity 7 .................................................................................... 371
Activity 8 .................................................................................... 372
Activity 9 .................................................................................... 372
Activity 10 .................................................................................. 375
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Activity 11 .................................................................................. 375
Activity 12 .................................................................................. 377
Activity 13 .................................................................................. 378
Activity 14 .................................................................................. 378
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Activity 15 .................................................................................. 379
Activity 16 .................................................................................. 379
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electronic or mechanical including photocopying – without written permission from the DepEd Central Office. First Edition, 2015.
I. INTRODUCTION
Look at the pictures shown below. Do you recognize them? Did you
take the National Career Assessment Examination (NCAE) when you
were in Grade 9? If so, what was your score? Did you know your rank?
Have you thought of comparing your academic performance with
that of your classmates?
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Have you wondered what score you need for each subject area to
qualify for honors?
Whenever your teacher asks your class to form a line according to
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your height, what is your position in relation to your classmates?
Have you asked yourself why a certain examinee in any national
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examination gets higher rank than the other examinees? Some state
colleges and universities are offering scholarship programs for graduating
students who belong to the upper 5%, 10%, or even 25%. What does this
mean to you?
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355
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In this module, you will study about the measures of position.
Remember to look for the answers to the following questions:
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ascending or descending order of their magnitude. Then, this ordered set is
divided into two equal parts by applying the concept of median. However, to
have more knowledge about the data set, we may divide it into more parts of
equal sizes. The measures of central tendency which are used for dividing the
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data into several equal parts are called partition values.
1. dealing with large amount of data, which includes the timely results for
standardized tests in schools, etc.
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Quantiles are very useful because they help the government to find
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how the income in a country is distributed, how much of the total income is
earned by low wage earning groups and by high wage earning groups. (If
both groups earn the same proportion of the income, then there is income
equality.)
356
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II. LESSONS AND COVERAGE
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solve problems involving measures of position.
Lesson 2 formulate statistical mini-research.
use appropriate measures of position and other statistical
methods in analyzing and interpreting research data.
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Here is a simple map of the lessons in this entire module.
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Measures of Position
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Ungrouped Grouped
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Data Data
Study Tips
To do well in this particular topic, you need to remember and do the following:
1. Study each part of the module carefully.
2. Take note of all the formulas given in each lesson.
3. Have your own scientific calculator. Make sure you are familiar with the
keys and functions of your calculator.
357
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electronic or mechanical including photocopying – without written permission from the DepEd Central Office. First Edition, 2015.
III. PRE-ASSESSMENT
Part I.
Find out how much you already know about this module. After taking and
checking this short test, take note of the items that you were not able to
answer correctly and look for the right answer as you go through this module.
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2. When a distribution is divided into hundred equal parts, each score
point that describes the distribution is called a ___________.
A. percentile C. quartile
B. decile D. median
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3. The lower quartile is equal to ______________.
A. 50th percentile C. 2nd decile
B. 25th percentile
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D. 3rd quartile
C. If the passing mark is the first quartile, she passed the test.
D. Her score is below the 5th decile.
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5. In the set of scores: 14, 17, 10, 22, 19, 24, 8, 12, and 19, the median
score is _______.
A. 17 C. 15
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B. 16 D. 13
358
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electronic or mechanical including photocopying – without written permission from the DepEd Central Office. First Edition, 2015.
7. The 1st quartile of the ages of 250 fourth year students is 16 years old.
Which of the following statements is true?
A. Most of the students are below 16 years old.
B. Seventy-five percent of the students are 16 years old and above.
C. Twenty-five percent of the students are 16 years old.
D. One hundred fifty students are younger than 16 years.
8. In a 100-item test, the passing mark is the 3rd quartile. What does it
imply?
A. The students should answer at least 75 items correctly to pass the
test.
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B. The students should answer at least 50 items correctly to pass the
test.
C. The students should answer at most 75 items correctly to pass the
test.
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D. The students should answer at most 50 items correctly to pass the
test. C
9. In a group of 55 examinees taking the 50-item test, Rachel obtained a
score of 38. This implies that her score is ______________.
A. below the 50th percentile C. the 55th percentile
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B. at the upper quartile D. below the 3rd decile
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83 72 87 79 82
77 80 73 86 81
79 82 79 74 74
D
359
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electronic or mechanical including photocopying – without written permission from the DepEd Central Office. First Edition, 2015.
For items 11 to 14, refer to table A below.
Table A
Cumulative Cumulative
Score Frequency
Frequency Percentage (%)
40-45 6 18 100.00
35-39 5 12 66.67
30-34 3 7 38.89
25-29 4 4 22.22
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11. In solving for the 60th percentile, the lower boundary is ___.
A. 34 C. 39
B. 34.5 D. 39.5
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12. What cumulative frequency should be used in solving for the 35th
percentile?
A. 4 C. 12
B. 7 D. 18
C
13. The 45th percentile is ________.
D
A. 33.4 C. 30.8
B. 32.7 D. 35.6
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B. 37.0 D. 37.5
Part II.
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Read and understand the situation below, then answer or perform what is
asked. (6 points)
360
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electronic or mechanical including photocopying – without written permission from the DepEd Central Office. First Edition, 2015.
Teacher’s Rubric in Assessing Students’ Performance
(Group Task)
Standards 4 3 2 1
Demonstrated Demonstrated Demonstrated Demonstrated
substantial understanding gaps in their little
understanding of the content understanding understanding
of the content, and task, even of the content of the content
Understanding processes, and though some and task
of Task demands of the supporting
task ideas or details
may have been
overlooked or
misunderstood
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Fully achieved Accomplished Completed Attempted to
the purpose of the task most of the task accomplish the
the task, task, but with
Completion of including little or no
Task thoughtful, success
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insightful
interpretations,
and conjectures C
Communicated Communicated Communicated Did not finish
their ideas and their findings their ideas and the research
findings effectively findings study and/or
effectively, were not able
raised to communicate
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Communication
interesting and ideas very well
of findings provocative
questions, and
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went beyond
what was
expected
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361
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Let us start our study of this module by first reviewing the concept of
median, which is one of the concepts needed in the study of this module.
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Discuss the answers to the questions below with a partner.
Activity 1:
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x y
The midpoint between two numbers x and y on the real number line is .
2
A B C
C
x y
x y
D
2
1. Find the coordinates of the midpoint (Q1) of AB in terms of x and y.
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A Q1 B
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x y
x
2
D
B Q2 C
x y
y
2
362
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electronic or mechanical including photocopying – without written permission from the DepEd Central Office. First Edition, 2015.
The median divides the distribution into two equal parts. It is a point in
the distribution where one-half of the distribution lies below it and one-half
above it. One-half of the distribution lies below B and one-half lies above it.
Hence, B represents the median.
Activity 2:
Below is the RG2 worksheet which will determine your prior knowledge about
the topic.
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Answer the main question: What are the ways to determine the position in a
set of data? Write your answer in the Ready part of the RG2 Worksheet.
RG2 Worksheet
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Ready : C
Get set :
Go :
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Activity 3:
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My Definition Table
Quartile
Decile
Percentile
363
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electronic or mechanical including photocopying – without written permission from the DepEd Central Office. First Edition, 2015.
This part of the module enables you to understand quantiles in a set
of ungrouped data. The activities in this section will help you answer the
question, What are the ways to determine the measure of position in a
given set of data?
The understanding that you will gain in doing these activities will
help you understand measures of position.
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Activity 4:
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you.
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E D
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It also means that 60% of the students are shorter than you. If you
are the 8th tallest student in a group of 10, how many percent of the
students are shorter than you? _________________________________
8,2,5,4,8,5,7,1,3,6,9
364
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First, arrange the scores in ascending order:
1 , 2 , 3 , 4 , 5 , 5 , 6 , 7 , 8 , 8 , 9
Q1 Q2 Q3
Lower Middle Upper
quartile quartile quartile
Middle Quartile is
also the_______
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Observe how the lower quartile (Q1), middle quartile (Q2), and
upper quartile (Q3) of the scores are obtained. Complete the
statements below:
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The first quartile 3 is obtained by ____________________________.
(observe the position of 3 from 1 to 5)
C
The second quartile 5 is obtained by _________________________ .
(observe the position of 5 from 1 to 9)
D
The third quartile 8 is obtained by ___________________________ .
(observe the position of 8 from 6 to 9).
E
7,4,8,9,3,6,7,4,5,8
Q1 Q2 Q3
Lower 67 Upper
6.5 quartile
quartile 2
365
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Let us take a closer look at the quartiles.
The quartiles are the score points which divide a distribution into four
equal parts. Twenty-five percent (25%) of the distribution are below the first
quartile, fifty percent (50%) are below the second quartile, and seventy-five
percent (75%) are below the third quartile. Q1 is called the lower quartile and
Q 3 is the upper quartile. Q1 < Q 2 < Q 3 , where Q 2 is nothing but the median.
The difference between Q 3 andQ1 is the interquartile range.
Since the second quartile is equal to the median, the steps in the
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computation of median by identifying the median class is the same as the
steps in identifying the Q1 class and the Q3 class.
Q1
O Q2 Q3
C
a. 25% of the data has a value ≤ Q1
b. 50% of the data has a value ≤ X or Q2
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c. 75% of the data has a value ≤ Q3
Example 1.
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came into his café each hour in a day. The results were 14, 10, 12, 9, 17, 5,
8, 9, 14, 10, and 11. Find the lower quartile and upper quartile of the data.
Solution:
D
366
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electronic or mechanical including photocopying – without written permission from the DepEd Central Office. First Edition, 2015.
Example 2.
Find the average of the lower quartile and the upper quartile of the
data.
Component Quantity
hard disk 290
monitors 370
keyboards 260
mouse 180
speakers 430
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Solution:
In increasing order, the data are 180, 260, 290, 370, 430.
The least value of the data is 180 and the greatest value of the
data is 430.
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The middle value of the data is 290.
The lower quartile is the value that is between the least value
and the middle value.
C
So, the lower quartile is 260.
The upper quartile is the value that is between the greatest
value and the middle value.
D
So, the upper quartile is 370.
The average of the lower quartile and the higher quartile
is equal to 315.
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Example 3.
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The lower quartile of a data set is the 8th data value. How many
data values are there in the data set?
Solution:
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The lower quartile is the median data value of the lower half of
the data set.
So, there are 7 data values before and after the lower quartile.
So, the number of data values in the lower half is equal to
7+7+1.
The number of values in the data set is equal to lower half +
upper half + 1.
The number of values in the lower and upper halves are equal.
Formula:
15+15+1=31
So, the data set contains 31 data values.
367
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Another solution:
1
(n + 1) = 8
4
n+1 = 32
n = 31
Example 4.
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apply their method on a data set with n elements, first calculate:
1
Lower Quartile (L) = Position of Q1 n 1
4
and round to the nearest integer. If L falls halfway between two integers,
round up. The Lth element is the lower quartile value (Q1).
Next calculate:
3
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Upper Quartile (U) = Position of Q3
4
n 1
C
and round to the nearest integer. If U falls halfway between two integers,
round down. The Uth element is the upper quartile value (Q3).
D
So for our example data set:
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4
to the nearest integer.
1
Position of Q1
4
n 1
D
1
(9 + 1)
4
1
(10)
4
2.5
368
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The computed value 2.5 becomes 3 after rounding up. The lower quartile
value (Q1) is the 3rd data element, so Q1 = 7. Similarly:
3
Q3
Position of
4
n 1
3
4
9 1
3
10
4
= 7.5
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The computed value 7.5 becomes 7 after rounding down. The upper quartile
value (Q3) is the 7th data element, so Q3 = 27.
Using this method, the upper quartile (Q3) and lower quartile (Q1)
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values are always two of the data elements.
Activity 5:
C
Find the first quartile (Q1), second quartile (Q2), and the third quartile
D
(Q3), given the scores of 10 students in their Mathematics activity using
Mendenhall and Sincich Method.
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4 9 7 14 10 8 12 15 6 11
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Example 5.
Find the first quartile (Q1) and the third quartile (Q3), given the scores
of 10 students in their Mathematics activity using Linear Interpolation.
D
1 27 16 7 31 7 30 3 21
Solution:
1 3 7 7 16 21 27 30 31
369
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b. Second, locate the position of the score in the distribution.
1
Position of Q1
4
n 1
1
9 1
4
1
10
4
= 2.5
Since the result is a decimal number, interpolation is needed.
c. Third, interpolate the value to obtain the 1st quartile.
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Steps of Interpolation
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7–3=4
Step 2: Multiply the result by the decimal part obtained in the second
step (Position of Q1).
C
4(0.5) = 2
Step 3: Add the result in step 2, to the 2nd or smaller number.
D
3+2=5
E
Solution:
a. First, arrange the scores in ascending order.
1 3 7 7 16 21 27 30 31
b. Second, locate the position of the score in the distribution.
D
3
Position of Q3
4
n 1
3
9 1
4
3
10
4
= 7.5
370
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c. Third, interpolate the value to obtain the 3rd quartile.
Steps of Interpolation
30 - 27 = 3
Step 2: Multiply the result by the decimal part obtained in the third
step (Position of Q3).
3(0.5) = 1.5
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Step 3: Add the result in step 2, (1.5), to the 7th or smaller number.
27 + 1.5 = 28.5
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Note: As we can see, these methods sometimes (but not always)
produce the same results.
C
Activity 6:
D
Find the first quartile (Q1), second quartile (Q2), and the third quartile
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(Q3), given the scores of 10 students in their Mathematics activity using Linear
Interpolation.
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4 9 7 14 10
8 12 15 6 11
Activity 7:
D
371
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1. What is Q1, Q2, and Q3 of their ages?
2. How many students belong to Q1, Q2, and Q3 in terms of their ages?
3. Have you realized the process of finding quartiles while doing the
activity?
Activity 8:
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Aqua Running has been promoted as a method for cardiovascular
conditioning for the injured athlete as well as for others who desire a low
impact aerobic workout. A study reported in the Journal of Sports Medicine
investigated the relationship between exercise cadence and heart rate by
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measuring the heart rates of 20 healthy volunteers at a cadence of 48 cycles
per minute (a cycle consisted of two steps). C
The data are listed here:
87 109 79 80 96 95 90 92 96 98
D
101 91 78 112 94 98 94 107 81 96
Activity 9:
EP
372
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The Deciles for Ungrouped Data
The deciles are the nine score points which divide a distribution into
ten equal parts. They are deciles and are denoted as D1, D2, D3,…, D9. They
are computed in the same way that the quartiles are calculated.
D1 D2 D3 D4 D5 D6 D7 D8 D9
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Example 6.
35 , 42 , 40 , 28 , 15 , 23 , 33 , 20 , 18 and 28.
Solution:
O
C
First, arrange the scores in ascending order.
15 18 20 23 28 28 33 35 40 42
D
3
To find its D3 position, use the formula n 1 and round off to the
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10
nearest integer.
3
Position of D3
10
10 1
D
3
10
11
33
10
= 3.3 ≈ 3
373
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Example 7
D2.5
35
minutes
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O
Explanation:
This means that 25% of the learners finished the test. A low
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quartile considered good, because it means the students finished the
test in a short period of time.
D
2. Anthony is a secretary in one big company in Metro Manila. His salary
is in the 7th decile. Should Anthony be glad about his salary or not?
E
Solution:
374
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Activity 10:
20, 35, 55, 28, 46, 32, 25, 56, 55, 28, 37, 60, 47, 52, 17
Find the value of the 2nd decile, 6th decile, and 8th decile.
PY
O
After studying several discussions, examples, and activities, it will be good
C
for you to look back and check if there are still aspects which you find confusing
and hard. You are now ready to answer questions like: How can the position of a
certain value in a given set of data be described and used in solving real-life
problems?
E D
Activity 11:
EP
23 38 28 46 22 20 18 34 36 35
D
45 48 16 22 27 25 29 31 30 25
44 21 18 43 21 26 37 29 13 37
375
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The Percentile for Ungrouped Data
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Q1 Q2 Q3
P25 P50 P75
O
P10 P20 P30 P40 P50 P60 P70 P80 P90
D1 D2 D3 D4 C D5 D6 D7 D8 D9
The percentiles determine the value for 1%, 2%,…, and 99% of the
D
data. P30 or 30th percentile of the data means 30% of the data have values
less than or equal to P30.
E
The 1st decile is the 10th percentile (P10). It means 10% of the data is
EP
Example 8
D
Find the 30th percentile or P30 of the following test scores of a random
sample of ten students: 35, 42, 40, 28, 15, 23, 33, 20, 18, and 28.
Solution:
15 18 20 23 28 28 33 35 40 42
376
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Steps to find percentile value on a data with n elements:
k n 1
To find its P30 position use the formula and round off to the
100
nearest integer.
30 10 1
Position of P30
100
30 11
100
300
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100
= 3.3
= 3.3 ≈ 3
O
P30 is the 3rd element.
Therefore, P30 = 20. C
Activity 12:
D
The scores of Miss World candidates from seven judges were
recorded as follows:
E
377
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Activity 13:
What does it mean? What is its measure of position in relation to the other
data?
Activity 14:
PY
Complete the Cross Quantile Puzzle by finding the specified measures of
position. Use linear interpolation. (In filling the boxes, disregard the decimal
1 4 3
point. For example, 14.3 should be written as .
Given:
O
Scores 5, 7, 12, 14, 15, 22, 25, 30, 36, 42, 53, 65
C
1 2 3 Across
2. D7
65 n 1
D
4 4.
100
90 n 1
E
8.
100
9. P9
EP
5 6
Down
7 8
1. Q2
90 n 1
9 3.
D
100
5. P40
6. P52
7. P54
378
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This section of the module will test your understanding of the different
measures of position by applying it to real-life situations. To demonstrate and
apply your knowledge, you will be given a practical task specifically in the field of
business and social sciences.
PY
Activity 15:
Write each step in finding the position / location in the given set of data using
the cloud below. Add or delete clouds, if necessary.
O
C
D
Activity 16:
E
EP
Time
People
(hours)
2 450 A total of 8000 people visited a shopping
4 1500 mall over 12 hours.
6 2300
D
8 5700
10 6850
12 8000
Estimate the third quartile (when 75% of the visitors had arrived).
Estimate the 40th percentile (when 40% of the visitors had arrived).
379
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Activity 17:
PY
O
C
Goal: Make your own criteria in choosing the Cleanest Classroom
D
Role: Students by Section
Officers
EP
380
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Teacher’s Rubric for Assessing Students’ Performance
(Group Task)
Standards 4 3 2 1
Understanding Demonstrated Demonstrated Demonstrated Demonstrated
of Task a substantial understanding gaps in their minimal
understanding of the content understanding understanding
of the content, and task, even of the content of the content
processes, though some and task
and demands supporting
of the task ideas or details
may have
been
PY
overlooked or
misunderstood
Completion of Fully achieved Accomplished Completed Attempted to
Task the purpose of the task most of the accomplish the
the task, task task, but with
including little or no
O
thoughtful, success
insightful,
interpretations
and
C
conjectures
Communication Communicated Communicated Communicated Did not finish
of findings their ideas and their findings their ideas and the
D
findings effectively findings investigation
effectively, and/or were
raised not able to
E
questions, and
went beyond
what was
expected
Group Process Used all their Worked well Worked Did not work
time together most together some very
D
381
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SUMMARY/SYNTHESIS/GENERALIZATION
This lesson was about measures of position for ungrouped data. The
lesson provided you with opportunities to illustrate and compute for quartiles,
deciles, and percentiles of ungrouped data. You were also given the
opportunity to formulate and solve real-life problems involving measures of
position.
PY
k
Position of Qk
4
n 1
O
Decile for Ungrouped Data
k
Position of Dk n 1
C
10
D
Percentile for Ungrouped Data
k
Position of Pk n 1
E
100
EP
D
382
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To check your readiness for the next topic, review the previous lessons.
PY
These will help you in the study of measure of position for grouped data. As you
study the module, you may answer the question: How are measures of position
for grouped data used in real-life situations? Do and accomplish the activities
with your partner.
Activity 1:
O
C
The following are scores of ten students in their 40-item quiz.
D
34 23 15 27 36 21 20 13 33 25
E
1. What are the scores of the students which are less than or equal to
25% of the data?
EP
______________________________________________________
2. What are the scores of the students which are less than or equal to
65% of the data?
______________________________________________________
D
3. What are the scores of the students which are less than or equal to 8%
of the data?
______________________________________________________
383
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Activity 2:
1. The bank manager observes the bank deposits in one specific day are
as follows:
PY
9000 1200 1750 1100 4500
750 1500 1600 11 000 12 500
7000 9500 1200 13 500 1400
O
2. The weights of the students in a class are the following: 69, 70, 75, 66,
C
83, 88, 66, 63, 61, 68, 73, 57, 52, 58, and 77.
38 40 41 45 48 48 50 50 51 51 52
D
52 53 54 55 55 55 56 56 57 59 59
59 62 62 62 63 64 65 66 66 67 67
69 69 71 77 78 79 79
384
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Did you find the previous activities easy? Were you able to answer
it? Are you now ready to get the measures of position in a grouped data?
To help you understand the next topic, notes with illustrative examples
are provided.
PY
Recall that quartiles divide the distribution into four equal parts.
The steps in computing the median are similar to that of Q1 and Q3. In
finding the median, we first need to determine the median class. In the same
manner, the Q1 and the Q3 class must be determined first before computing
O
for the value of Q1 and Q3. The Q1 class is the class interval where the
N 3N
th score is contained, while the class interval that contains the th
4
C 4
score is the Q3 class.
D
In computing the quartiles of grouped data, the following formula is
used:
E
kN
4 cf b
Q LB i
EP
fQk
k
385
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Example 1.
Calculate the Q1, Q2, and Q3 of the Mathematics test scores of 50 students.
Scores Frequency
46-50 4
41-45 8
36-40 11
31-35 9
26-30 12
21-25 6
PY
Solution:
O
46-50 4 45.5 50
41-45 8 40.5 46
36-40 11 35.5
C 38
(28th-38th score) Q3 class
31-35 9 30.5 27 (19th-27th score) Q2 class
26-30 12 25.5 18 (7th-18th score) Q1 class
D
21-25 6 20.5 6
N = 50
E
N 50 LB 25.5
Q1 class:
4 4 N 50
EP
12.5 cf b 6
fQ 12
This means we need to find 2
score is contained. N
Note that the 7th-18th scores 4 cf b
Q
LB i
belong to the class interval: 26-30. 1
f Q1
So, the 12.5th score is also within the
class interval.
12.5 6
The Q1 class is class interval Q1 25.5
5
26-30. 12
Q1 28.21
Therefore, 25% of the students have a score less than or equal to 28.21.
386
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2N 2 50 LB 30.5
Q2 class:
4 4 N 50
100 cf b 18
4
25 fQ 9
2
PY
Q2 30.5 5
The Q2 class is the class 9
interval 31-35. Q2 34.39
O
Therefore, 50% of the students have a score less than or equal to 34.39
C LB 35.5
3N 3 50
Q3 class: N 50
4 4
cf b 27
150
D
fQ 11
4 2
37.5 i 5
E
Q3 LB i
contained. f Q3
Note that the 28th-38th scores
belong to the class interval: 36-40. So, 37.5 27
Q3 35.5 5
the 37.5th score is also within the 11
D
class interval.
Q3 40.27
The Q3 class is class interval
36-40.
Therefore, 75% of the students have a score less than or equal to
40.27. The third quartile 40.27 falls within the class boundaries of 36-40 which
is (35.5-40.5)
387
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The Deciles for Grouped Data
Deciles are those values that divide the total frequency into 10 equal
parts. The kth decile denoted by Dk is computed as follows:
kN
10 cf b
Dk LB i
f Dk
PY
cf b = cumulative frequency before the Dk class
f Dk = frequency of the Dk class
i = size of class interval
k = nth decile where n = 1, 2, 3, 4, 5,
O
6, 7, 8, and 9
Example 2.
C
Calculate the 7th decile of the Mathematics test scores of 50 students.
D
Scores Frequency
46-50 4
E
41-45 8
36-40 11
EP
31-35 9
26-30 12
21-25 6
D
388
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Solution:
Less than
Lower
Class Interval Frequency Cumulative
Boundaries
Scores (f) Frequency
(LB)
(<cf)
46-50 4 45.5 50
41-45 8 40.5 46
36-40 11 35.5 38 (28th-38th score)
31-35 9 30.5 27 D7 class
26-30 12 25.5 18
PY
21-25 6 20.5 6
N = 50
O
7N
7N 10 cf b
D7 class: = D7 LB i
10
f D7
350
C
=
10 35 27
= 35 D7 35.5 5
11
D
This means we need to find the
class interval where the 35th score is
D7 39.14
E
contained.
Note that the 28th-38th scores
EP
389
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The Percentile for Grouped Data
Early on, you have already learned that kth quartile denoted by Qk and
the kth deciles denoted by Dk are computed, respectively, as follows:
kN kN
4 cf b 10 cf b
Qk LB i and Dk LB i
f Qk f Dk
PY
Finding percentiles of a grouped data is similar to that of finding
quartiles and deciles of a grouped data.
O
kN
cf b
Pk LB 100 i
C f Pk
where:
D
LB = lower boundary of the kth percentile class
N = total frequency
cf b = cumulative frequency before the percentile class
E
i
k = nth percentile where n = 1, 2, 3,…, 97, 98, and 99
Example 3.
Calculate the 65th percentile and 32nd percentile of the Mathematics
D
Scores Frequency
46-50 4
41-45 8
36-40 11
31-35 9
26-30 12
21-25 6
390
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Solution:
Less than
Lower
Class Interval Frequency Cumulative
Boundaries
Scores (f) Frequency
(LB)
(<cf)
46-50 4 45.5 50
41-45 8 40.5 46
36-40 11 35.5 38 (28th-38th score)
31-35 9 30.5 27 P65 class
26-30 12 25.5 18 (7th-18th score)
21-25 6 20.5 6 Q1 class
PY
65N LB 35.5
P65 class : =
O
100 N 50
3250 Cf b 27
=
100 f P 11
= 32.5
C 65
i =5
This means we need to find the
class interval where the 32.5th score is 65N
D
contained. 100 cf b
P65 LB i
Note that the 28th-38th scores f P65
E
11
The P65 class is the class
interval 36-40. P65 38
D
Therefore, 65% of the students got a score less than or equal to 36-40.
391
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32N 32 50 32N
P32 class: = 100 cf b
100 100 P32 LB i
1600 f P32
=
100
= 16 16 6
P32 25.5 5
This means we need to find the 12
class interval where the 16th score is
contained. P32 29.67
Note that the 7th-18th scores
belong to the class interval: 26-30. So,
the 16th score is also within the class
PY
interval.
The P32 class is class interval
26-30.
O
Therefore, 32% of the students got a score less than or equal to 29-67.
Percentile Rank
C
Percentile ranks are particularly useful in relating individual scores to
their positions in the entire group. A percentile rank is typically defined as the
D
proportion of scores in a distribution that a specific score is greater than or
equal to. For instance, if you received a score of 95 on a mathematics test
and this score was greater than or equal to the scores of 88% of the students
E
100 P LB f P
D
PPR cf P
N i
392
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Example 4.
Find how many percent of the scores are greater than the cumulative
frequency of 38 in the previous table.
Solution:
Scores Frequency cf
46-50 4 50
41-45 8 46
36-40 11 38
(28th – 38th score)
31-35 9 27
26-30 12 18
PY
21-25 6 6
O
P = 38
N = 50
f P = 11 100 38 35.5 27
PPR
cf P = 27
C
50 5
27
I =5
PPR 65
D
Therefore, 65% of the scores are less than the cumulative frequency of
E
38, while 35% of the scores are greater than the cumulative frequency of 38.
Example 5.
EP
Consultant
D
Number of Cumulative
Fees
Consultants Frequency
(in Php)
6400 – 7599 24 120
5200 – 6399 36 96
4000 – 5199 19 60
2800 – 3999 26 41
1600 – 2799 15 15
393
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100 P LB f P
Php 5,400 is within 5200-6399 PPR cf P
LB = 5199.5 N i
N = 120
100 5400 5199.5 36
P = 5,400.00 PR 60
cf = 60 120 1200
P
fP = 36 PPR 55.01
i = 1200
Therefore, 55% of consultants make Php 5,400.00 or less per day and
PY
45% of consultants make Php 5,400.00 or more per day.
O
Activity 3:
61-70 15 43
51-60 4 28
EP
41-50 12 24
31-40 6 12
21-30 3 6
D
11-20 2 3
1-10 1 1
____ ____ ____ ____ ____ ____ ____ ____ ____ ____
394
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Given the frequency distribution, compute for each quantile and match
it with the letter code of its corresponding value to complete the phrase in the
preceding page:
Q1 T. 43
Q2 I. 61.83
Q3 N. 72.5
P15 Y. 35.5
P35 L. 48
P70 A. 69.83
D6 M. 65.83
PY
D4 C. 50/5
D8 O. 75.5
R. 34
O
Activity 4: C
The following is a distribution for the number of employees in 45 companies
belonging to a certain industry. Calculate the third quartile, 85th percentile,
and 4th decile of the number of employees given the number of companies.
D
Number of Number of
Employees Companies
E
41 – 45 11
EP
36 – 40 6
31 – 35 9
26 – 30 7
21 – 25 8
D
16 – 20 4
395
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Activity 5:
Find the 1st quartile, 7th decile, 35th percentile, and percentile rank of 115
and 155 for the following distribution.
PY
101 – 110 11
91 – 100 13
81 – 90 9
71 – 80 4
O
C
After having several discussions, examples, and activities, you need to have
D
a closer look once again if there are still aspects which you find confusing and
hard. You are now ready to answer questions like: How can the position of data
be described and used in solving real-life problems?
E
EP
Activity 6:
college scholarship is that a student’s score should be in the top 10% of the
scores of his/her graduating class. The students in the graduating class
obtained the following scores in the NCAE.
396
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NCAE Scores f LB <cf
24 – 26 10
21 – 23 9
18 – 20 7
15 – 17 8
12 – 14 4
9 – 11 2
6–8 1
3–5 1
PY
<cf (less than cumulative frequency). Explain how you arrived at your
answers.
2. Find the 3rd quartile, 72nd percentile, and the 8th decile of the set of
data.
O
3. What is the percentile rank of Dennis and Christine?
C
4. Based on their percentile and percentile ranks, will Dennis and
Christine receive a scholarship? Explain your answer.
D
Activity 7:
E
In this activity, you will be asked to complete the 1 – 4 – 3 chart. Write down
what is being asked regarding the different measures of position.
EP
1 – 4 – 3 LIST
One thing I really love about this topic
1.
Four important reasons why I love this topic
1.
D
2.
3.
4.
Three things I still need to understand about this topic
1.
2.
3.
397
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You have already learned and identified the measures of position and the
process of computing and interpreting results. You will now take a closer look at
some aspects of the topic and check if you still have misconceptions about
measures of position.
Activity 8:
PY
I. Things Learned and Insights
II. Concept Map
III. Difficulties
IV. Unforgettable Experiences / Activities
Activity 9:
O
C
Conduct a mini-research on students’ performance in the final
examination in Mathematics. Apply the knowledge and skills you have
learned in this lesson to evaluate and interpret test results and to
D
make/formulate meaningful decisions based on the results to resolve the
difficulties of the students.
E
EP
D
398
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Teacher’s Scoring Rubric in Assessing Students’ Performance
(Group Task)
Approaching
Criteria Proficient Developing Beginning
Proficient
The paper The paper The paper The paper did
demonstrated demonstrated demonstrated not
that the that the that the demonstrate
student fully student, for the student, to a that the
understands most part, certain extent, student has
and has understands understands fully
applied and has applied and has understood
PY
concepts concepts applied and applied
learned in the learned in the concepts concepts
INTEGRATION course. course. Some learned in the learned in the
OF Concepts are of the course. course.
KNOWLEDGE integrated into conclusions,
O
the writer’s however, are
own insights. not supported
The writer
provides
C in the body of
the paper.
concluding
remarks that
D
show analysis
and synthesis
E
of ideas.
The topic is The topic is The topic is The topic is
focused focused but too broad for not clearly
EP
399
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Approaching
Criteria Proficient Developing Beginning
Proficient
sections of the sections of the content or
evidenced by
paper paper content run-
cursory
ons discussion
excessively.
(with limited
supporting
points) in all
sections of
the paper.
Ties together For the most Sometimes Does not tie
information part, ties ties together together
PY
from all together information information
sources information from all Paper does
Paper flows from all sources sources not have a
from one issue Paper flows Paper did not good flow and
to the next with only some flow - appears to be
O
without the disjointedness. disjointedness created from
need for Student's is apparent. disparate
headings.
C
writing Student's issues.
COHESIVENESS Student's demonstrates writing does Headings are
writing an not necessary to
demonstrates understanding demonstrate link concepts.
D
an of the an Writing does
understanding relationship understanding not
E
400
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electronic or mechanical including photocopying – without written permission from the DepEd Central Office. First Edition, 2015.
Activity 10:
Ask your classmates about their Science, English, and Mathematics grades.
Gather all the data from your classmates by listing. Then, construct a
frequency distribution of a grouped data. (use i = 5).
PY
f. 60th percentile
g. 85th percentile
h. percentile rank of 75
i. percentile rank of 82
O
Interpret each result.
______________________________________________________________
______________________________________________________________
C
______________________________________________________________
_____________________________________________________________ .
D
Activity 11:
E
My Definition Table
EP
Quartile
D
Decile
Percentile
401
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SUMMARY/SYNTHESIS/GENERALIZATION
PY
Quartile for Grouped Data
kN
cf b
Qk LB 4 i
fQk
O
C
Decile for Grouped Data
kN
D
cf b
Dk LB 10 i
f Dk
E
EP
kN
100 cf b
Pk LB i
D
f Pk
Percentile Rank
100 P LB f P
PPR cf P
N i
402
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electronic or mechanical including photocopying – without written permission from the DepEd Central Office. First Edition, 2015.
GLOSSARY OF TERMS
Deciles - the nine score points which divide a distribution into ten equal parts.
These deciles are denoted as D1, D2, D3,… D9.
Percentiles - the ninety-nine score points which divide a distribution into one
1
hundred equal parts so that each part represents of the data set. They
100
are used to characterize values according to the percentage below them.
Quantiles - measures of positions that divide a distribution into four, ten, and
hundred equal parts. Such measures of positions are quartiles, deciles, and
PY
percentiles.
Quartiles - the score points which divide a distribution into four equal parts.
Twenty-five percent (25%) of the distribution fall below the first quartile, fifty
percent (50%) fall below the second quartile, and seventy-five percent (75%)
O
fall below the third quartile.
C
REFERENCES AND WEBSITE LINKS USED IN THIS MODULE
References:
D
De Guzman-Santos, R., De Guzman, T., Ungriano, A., Yabut, E. (2006).
Statistics. Manila, Philippines. Centro Escolar University Publishing
E
House.
EP
Oronce, O., Mendoza, M. (2010). E-math IV. Quezon City, Philippines. Rex
Book Store, Inc.
403
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electronic or mechanical including photocopying – without written permission from the DepEd Central Office. First Edition, 2015.
Website Links as References and Sources of Learning Activities:
http://www.slideshare.net/maggiev/the-interpretation-of-quartiles-and-
percentiles-july-2009
This site provides formula, examples, and exercises of quartile, percentile,
and decile.
http://www.mathsisfun.com/data/quartiles.html
This site provides examples of quartile.
www.mathsisfun.com/data/percentiles.html
This site provides examples and exercises of percentile.
PY
www.harding.edu/sbreezeel/460%20files/statbook/chapter5.pdf
This site provides formula, examples, and exercises of percentile and
percentile ranks.
http://www.onlinemathlearning.com/quartile.html
O
This site provides problems for the cross-quantile problem.
C
https://www.google.com.ph
The following sites provide pictures that made the module more attractive and
interesting especially to students.
D
http://books.google.com.ph//
International Business Research By Neelankavil
This provides exercise for business in calculator drill.
E
http://alstatr.blogspot.com/2013/06/quartiles-deciles-and-percentiles.html
EP
http://answers.yahoo.com/question/index?qid=20100630123126AA7lZZa
This provides exercise for business in calculator drill.
D
http://www.icoachmath.com/problems/problemslink.aspx
This site provides examples and exercises of quartile.
404
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