Find the mean of: 2, 4, 6, 8
Averages
Averages summarise data using values such as mean, median and mode. Choosing the correct average is important when interpreting data in statistics.
Overview
An average is a single value used to represent a set of data.
In GCSE Maths, the three main averages are mean, median and mode. You will also often be asked for the range, which shows spread.
What you should understand after this topic
- Calculate mean, median, mode and range
- Order data correctly
- Find the mean from a frequency table
- Choose the most suitable average
- Avoid common exam mistakes
Mean
Uses all the values.
Median
The middle value when the data is in order.
Mode
The most common value.
Range
The biggest value minus the smallest value.
Key Definitions
Average
A value that represents a set of data.
Mean
Add all the values, then divide by how many values there are.
Median
The middle value when the data is written in order.
Mode
The value that appears most often.
Range
The difference between the highest and lowest values.
Frequency
How many times a value appears.
Discrete Data
Data made of separate values, often whole numbers.
Frequency Table
A table showing each value and how often it occurs.
Key Rules
Mean
Add all values and divide by the number of values.
Median
Put the data in order first.
Mode
Look for the value that appears most often.
Range
\( \text{largest} - \text{smallest} \)
Quick Choosing Guide
Best when using all data
Mean
Best when one value is unusually large or small
Median
Best when asking for the most common result
Mode
Best for spread
Range
How to Solve
Step 1: Understand the four main statistics
In GCSE Maths, averages usually refers to the mean, median and mode. The range is often included because it describes how spread out the data is.
Step 2: Finding the mean
The mean uses all the data values. Add them together, then divide by how many values there are.
Step 3: Finding the median
The median is the middle value, but the data must be written in order first.
Step 4: Finding the mode
The mode is the value that appears most often.
Step 5: Finding the range
The range shows the spread of the data by subtracting the smallest value from the largest value.
Step 6: Mean from a frequency table
For a frequency table, multiply each value by its frequency first, then divide by the total frequency.
Step 7: Choosing the best average
Use the mean
When you want to include every value in the data.
Use the median
When there are extreme values that could affect the mean.
Use the mode
When you want the most common value or category.
Use the range
When you want to describe how spread out the data is.
Example Questions
Edexcel
Exam-style questions inspired by Edexcel GCSE Mathematics, focusing on calculating mean, median, mode and range.
Find the mean of \( 5,\ 7,\ 8 \).
Find the median of \( 9,\ 2,\ 6,\ 4,\ 7 \).
Find the mode of \( 3,\ 5,\ 5,\ 8,\ 9 \).
Find the range of \( 4,\ 10,\ 6,\ 13,\ 8 \).
AQA
Exam-style questions based on the AQA GCSE Mathematics specification, focusing on averages with frequency and multi-step reasoning.
Find the median of \( 1,\ 3,\ 5,\ 7,\ 9,\ 11 \).
The values 2, 4 and 6 have frequencies 3, 2 and 1.
Find the mean.
The table shows the number of goals scored by a team in 6 matches.
| Goals | Frequency |
|---|---|
| 0 | 1 |
| 1 | 2 |
| 2 | 2 |
| 3 | 1 |
Find the mean number of goals scored.
OCR
Exam-style questions aligned with OCR GCSE Mathematics, emphasising reasoning and reverse mean problems.
The mean of 4 numbers is 9.
The first three numbers are 7, 10 and 8.
Find the fourth number.
A student says, "The mean is always the best average to use."
Tick one box. True โ False โ
Give a reason for your answer.
Explain why the median is often used instead of the mean when there are extreme values in a data set.
Exam Checklist
Step 1
Read the question carefully and decide which average is needed.
Step 2
If finding the median, put the data in order first.
Step 3
If using a frequency table, multiply value by frequency.
Step 4
Check whether the answer makes sense in the context.
Most common exam mistakes
Mean mistake
Dividing by the wrong number of values.
Median mistake
Not ordering the data first.
Mode mistake
Choosing the biggest number instead of the most common number.
Frequency mistake
Forgetting to use frequencies when calculating the mean.
Common Mistakes
These are common mistakes students make when calculating averages in GCSE Maths.
Not ordering data for the median
A student finds the middle value without arranging the data first.
To find the median, the data must be written in order from smallest to largest. The middle value is then selected correctly.
Dividing by the wrong number for the mean
A student adds the values but divides by the wrong total.
The mean is calculated by dividing the total sum by the number of values. Make sure you count all values correctly.
Confusing mode and median
A student says the mode is the middle value.
The mode is the most frequent value, while the median is the middle value after ordering the data.
Using incorrect values for the range
A student subtracts the wrong numbers when finding the range.
The range is found by subtracting the smallest value from the largest value. Always check both extremes carefully.
Forgetting frequency in tables
A student adds values but ignores their frequency.
In a frequency table, each value must be multiplied by its frequency before adding. This ensures the mean is calculated correctly.
Try It Yourself
Practise calculating the mean, median, mode and range from data.
Foundation Practice
Calculate mean, median, mode and range from simple data.
Find the mean of: 3, 5, 7
Find the median of: 1, 3, 5, 7, 9
Find the median of: 2, 4, 6, 8
Find the mode of: 2, 3, 3, 4, 5
Find the range of: 4, 8, 10, 12
Which average is the most frequent value?
Find the mean of: 10, 20, 30, 40
A student finds the median without ordering the data. What is wrong?
Find the range of: 15, 20, 35, 40
Higher Practice
Solve problems involving averages, including missing values and reasoning.
The mean of 5 numbers is 10. What is their total?
The mean of 4 numbers is 6. What is their total?
Find the median of: 5, 1, 9, 3, 7
The mean of 3 numbers is 8. Two numbers are 6 and 10. Find the third number.
Which average is most affected by extreme values?
Find the range of: 100, 105, 110, 150
A set has no repeated values. What is the mode?
The mean of 6 numbers is 12. What is their total?
A student forgets to divide when finding the mean. What is wrong?
The mean of 5 numbers is 20. Four numbers are 10, 15, 25, 30. Find the fifth number.
Games
Practise this topic with interactive games.
Frequently Asked Questions
What are the three averages?
Mean, median and mode.
When is median useful?
When there are outliers.
How do I find mean?
Add values and divide by total.