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Types of Frequency Distribution Table: Reporter Course/Major Subject Topic Professor School Year Time

The document summarizes different types of frequency distribution tables, including grouped frequency distribution tables, ungrouped frequency distribution tables, and relative frequency tables. It provides examples of each. Grouped frequency distribution tables organize large data sets into smaller groups to identify trends. Ungrouped data lists values from highest to lowest without groups. Relative frequency tables show the popularity of data values based on calculating each value as a percentage of the total sample.

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DINA CANDELARIA
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
66 views6 pages

Types of Frequency Distribution Table: Reporter Course/Major Subject Topic Professor School Year Time

The document summarizes different types of frequency distribution tables, including grouped frequency distribution tables, ungrouped frequency distribution tables, and relative frequency tables. It provides examples of each. Grouped frequency distribution tables organize large data sets into smaller groups to identify trends. Ungrouped data lists values from highest to lowest without groups. Relative frequency tables show the popularity of data values based on calculating each value as a percentage of the total sample.

Uploaded by

DINA CANDELARIA
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© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Reporter : JULIANA P.

LOZANO
Course/Major : Master of Arts in Education
Major in Administration and Supervision
Subject : ED 202 -INFERENTIAL STATISTICS
Topic : Types of Frequency Distribution Table
Professor : MARIA P. DELA VEGA, Ph.D
School Year : 2nd Semester 2020-2021
Time : 2:00-5:00 PM Saturdays

TYPES OF FREQUENCY DISTRIBUTION TABLE

GROUP FREQUENCY DISTRIBUTION


The grouped frequency table is a statistic method to organize and simplify a large set of data in to
smaller "groups.“
When a data consists of hundreds of values, it is preferable to group them in a smaller chunks to make
it more understandable.
When grouped frequency table is created, scientists and statistician can observe interesting trends in
the data.

The main purpose of the grouped frequency table is to find out how often each value occurred within
each group of the entire data.
The group frequency distribution is essentially a table with two columns. The first column titled
"Groups" represents all possible "grouping" of the data and the second column titled "Frequency"
represents how frequent each value occurred within each group.

UNGROUPED FREQUENCY DISTRIBUTION


Ungrouped data are data that are not organized, or if arranged, could only be from highest to
lowest or lowest to highest.
Class Boundaries-are the numbers used to separate classes, but without
the gaps created by class limits

Class Midpoint-Class Mark or Class Midpoint is the respective average of each class limits.
Class width -refers to the difference between the upper and lower boundaries of any class (category).
Depending on the author, it’s also sometimes used more specifically to mean:
The difference between the upper limits of two consecutive (neighboring) classes, or
The difference between the lower limits of two consecutive classes

RELATIVE FREQUENCY TABLE-


RELATIVE FREQUENCY= class frequency
sum of all frequencies

Relative frequency table -is a chart that shows the popularity or mode of a certain type of data based on
the population sampled. When we look at relative frequency, we are looking at the number of times a
specific event occurs compared to the total number of events. The relative frequency distribution and
percentage frequency distribution are variants of the frequency distribution. The relative frequency
distribution is similar to the frequency distribution, except that instead of the number of observations
belonging to a particular interval, the ratio of the number of observations in the interval to the total
number of observations, also known as the relative frequency, is determined. The percentage frequency
distribution is arrived at by multiplying the relative frequencies of each interval by 100%. The
cumulative frequency distribution is obtained by computing the cumulative frequency, defined as the
total frequency of all values less than the upper class limit of a particular interval, for all intervals. From
a frequency distribution, this can be done by simply adding together the frequencies of the interval and
all other preceding intervals (i.e., intervals whose values are less than the values of a particular interval).
We can also calculate the relative cumulative frequency distribution and the percentage cumulative
frequency distribution from the cumulative frequency distribution.

EX. Given the following set of measurements for a particular sample:


2.5 5.9 3.2 1.4 7.0 4.3 8.9 0.7 4.2 9.9
3.4 4.6 5.0 6.4 1.1 9.2 7.7 0.9 4.0 2.3
5.6 2.2 3.1 4.7 5.5 6.6 1.9 3.9 6.1 5.2
8.2 3.3 2.2 5.8 4.1 3.8 1.2 6.8 9.5 0.8
we note that the values range from 0 to 10.0. Therefore, we can create the following 10 classes:

class 1:0 - 1.0 class 6:5.0 - 6.0


class 2:1.0 - 2.0 class 7:6.0 - 7.0
class 3:2.0 - 3.0 class 8:7.0 - 8.0
class 4:3.0 - 4.0 class 9:8.0 - 9.0
class 5:4.0 - 5.0 class 10: 9.0 - 10.0
We assume that a measurement that falls on the border between two intervals belongs to the previous
interval (e.g. the value 4.0 belongs to class 4 instead of class 5). By counting the number of observations
that fall into each class, we get the following frequency distribution:

COMPLETE FREQUENCY DISTRIBUTION TABLE


- A complete frequency distribution table has class mark or midpoint (x),class boundaries,
(c,b),frequency, and the less than cumulative frequency(<cf) and the greater than cumulative
frequency(>cf)
RELATIVE FREQUENCY
is the fraction of times an answer occurs. To find the relative frequencies, divide each frequency by the
total number of data in the sample.

CUMULATIVE RELATIVE FREQUENCY


is the accumulation of the previous relative frequencies. To find the cumulative relative frequencies, add
all the previous relative frequencies to the relative frequency for the current row.

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