Histograms

Histograms display continuous data using bars with varying widths. They use frequency density to represent how data is distributed.

Overview

A histogram is used to display grouped continuous data.

The bars touch each other, and when class widths are unequal, the height of each bar represents frequency density, not frequency.

\( \text{Frequency Density} = \dfrac{\text{Frequency}}{\text{Class Width}} \)

This is the key idea in histograms. Wider class intervals must be adjusted, otherwise the graph would be misleading.

What you should understand after this topic

  • Understand what makes a histogram different from a bar chart
  • Understand why the bars in a histogram touch
  • Calculate class width correctly
  • Calculate frequency density
  • Read and draw a histogram accurately

Key Definitions

Histogram

A graph for grouped continuous data.

Continuous Data

Data that can take any value in an interval.

Class Interval

A group of values, such as 10–20 or 20–30.

Class Width

The size of the interval.

Frequency

How many data values are in that class.

Frequency Density

The value used for the height of each bar in a histogram.

Key Rules

Bars touch

Because the data is continuous.

Use class width

Work out how wide each group is first.

Use frequency density

The bar height is usually not the raw frequency.

Area links to frequency

In a histogram, bar area represents the frequency.

Key Formulas

Frequency density

\( \text{Frequency Density} = \dfrac{\text{Frequency}}{\text{Class Width}} \)

Frequency

\( \text{Frequency} = \text{Frequency Density} \times \text{Class Width} \)

How to Solve

Step 1: Recognise a histogram

A histogram is used for grouped continuous data. The bars touch because the data is continuous.

Exam thinking: If class widths are different, you must use frequency density.
Histograms are usually drawn from grouped data in frequency tables.
Example Histogram 0 0.5 1.0 1.5 2.0 0 10 20 30 50 Value Frequency Density

Step 2: Understand area represents frequency

In a histogram, the area of each bar represents the frequency.

Key idea

Area = width × height
So frequency depends on both width and height.

Step 3: Find class width

The class width is the size of each interval.

For \(10 \le x < 20\), class width = \(20 - 10 = 10\).

Step 4: Calculate frequency density

Use the formula:

\( \text{Frequency Density} = \dfrac{\text{Frequency}}{\text{Class Width}} \)
Exam tip: Always calculate this before drawing the histogram.

Step 5: Draw the histogram

Common check: Width = class interval, height = frequency density.
  1. Draw the horizontal axis using class intervals.
  2. Label the vertical axis as frequency density.
  3. Draw each bar with correct width (class width).
  4. Set the height using frequency density.
  5. Ensure all bars touch.

Step 6: Read a histogram

You may need to find frequency from a histogram.

\( \text{Frequency} = \text{Frequency Density} \times \text{Class Width} \)
Exam thinking: Multiply height by width to get frequency.

Step 7: Reverse problems

Sometimes only the histogram is given, and you must find missing values.

Use the bar height as frequency density.
Multiply by class width to find frequency.
Complete any missing values in the table.

Step 8: Histogram vs bar chart

See bar charts for comparison.

Histogram

Continuous data, bars touch, area represents frequency.

Bar chart

Discrete data, bars do not touch.

Example Questions

Edexcel

Exam-style questions inspired by Edexcel GCSE Mathematics, focusing on class width and frequency density.

Edexcel

Find the class width of \( 15 \leq x < 25 \).

Edexcel

A class interval has frequency 18 and class width 6.

Find the frequency density.

Edexcel

A histogram bar has class width 8 and frequency density 2.5.

Find the frequency represented by this bar.

AQA

Exam-style questions based on the AQA GCSE Mathematics specification, focusing on completing histogram tables.

AQA

The table shows information about the times some people spent in a shop.

Time, \(t\) minutesFrequencyClass widthFrequency density
0 < t ≤ 102010
10 < t ≤ 307020
30 < t ≤ 35225
35 < t ≤ 503015
50 < t ≤ 60810

Complete the frequency density column.

AQA

For the class interval \( 30 < t \leq 35 \), the frequency is 22.

Find the frequency density.

OCR

Exam-style questions aligned with OCR GCSE Mathematics, emphasising interpreting histograms and understanding area.

OCR

A histogram bar has width 20 and frequency density 0.8.

Find the frequency represented by the bar.

OCR

One bar in a histogram is twice as wide as another bar.

Explain why you cannot compare the frequencies using only the heights of the bars.

OCR

Explain why the bars in a histogram touch.

Exam Checklist

Step 1

Work out the class width for each group.

Step 2

Calculate frequency density carefully.

Step 3

Label the vertical axis as frequency density.

Step 4

Make sure the bars touch and have correct widths.

Most common exam mistakes

Wrong axis

Writing frequency instead of frequency density.

Wrong width

Using the wrong class width in the calculation.

Height confusion

Thinking the tallest bar always has the highest frequency.

Bar gaps

Leaving spaces between bars like a bar chart.

Common Mistakes

These are common mistakes students make when drawing and interpreting histograms in GCSE Maths.

Using frequency instead of frequency density

Incorrect

A student labels the vertical axis as frequency.

Correct

Histograms use frequency density on the vertical axis, not frequency. Frequency density is calculated using \(\frac{\text{frequency}}{\text{class width}}\).

Forgetting to divide by class width

Incorrect

A student plots frequency directly without adjusting for class width.

Correct

You must divide the frequency by the class width to find frequency density before drawing the bars.

Drawing gaps between bars

Incorrect

A student leaves spaces between the bars.

Correct

Histograms represent continuous data, so the bars must touch with no gaps between them.

Using incorrect class width

Incorrect

A student calculates class width incorrectly from the intervals.

Correct

Class width is found by subtracting the lower boundary from the upper boundary. Use boundaries, not midpoints.

Assuming bar height equals frequency

Incorrect

A student compares bar heights directly as if they represent frequency.

Correct

In histograms, frequency is represented by the area of the bar, not just the height. Both height and width must be considered.

Try It Yourself

Practise interpreting and drawing histograms using frequency density.

Questions coming soon
Foundation

Foundation Practice

Understand frequency density and read simple histograms.

Question 1

What is frequency density?

Games

Practise this topic with interactive games.

Games coming soon.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is frequency density?

Frequency divided by class width.

Why are bars different widths?

Class intervals can vary.

What is on the vertical axis?

Frequency density.