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Ogive

The document provides instructions for constructing an ogive graph from test score data for 16 students. It involves making a relative frequency table, calculating cumulative frequencies, and plotting the cumulative relative frequencies on a graph with class boundaries on the x-axis and cumulative relative frequency on the y-axis. Connecting the plotted points results in the ogive graph.
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
120 views1 page

Ogive

The document provides instructions for constructing an ogive graph from test score data for 16 students. It involves making a relative frequency table, calculating cumulative frequencies, and plotting the cumulative relative frequencies on a graph with class boundaries on the x-axis and cumulative relative frequency on the y-axis. Connecting the plotted points results in the ogive graph.
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Download as DOCX, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Example 5: Take the following scores of 16 students in a 50-item test: 3,11,12,12,19, 22, 23, 24, 25, 27, 29,

35,
36, 37,45, 49.
Solution:
Step 1. Make a relative frequency table from the data. The first column has the class limits, the second
column has the frequency (the count), and the third column has the relative frequency (class
frequency / total number of items).
Step 2. Add a fourth column and cumulate (add up) the frequencies in column 2, going down from top to
bottom. For example, the second entry is the sum of the first row and the second row in the frequency
column (1 + 4 = 5), and the third entry is the sum of the first, second, and third rows in the frequency
column (1 + 4 + 6 = 11).
Step 3. Add a fifth column and cumulate the relative frequencies from column 3. If you do this step correctly,
your values should add up to 100% (or 1 as a decimal).
Data Relative
Frequency Cumulative Frequency Cumulative Relative Frequency
Range Frequency
1 – 10 1 1/16 = 0.0625 1 0.0625
11 – 20 4 4/16 = 0.25 5 0.3125
21 – 30 6 6/16 = 0.375 11 Step 2 0.6875 Step 3
31 – 40 3 3/16 = 0.1875 14 0.875
Step 1
41 - 50 2 2/16=0.125 16 1

Step 4. Draw a Cartesian plane x-y graph with percent cumulative relative frequency on the y-axis (from 0 to
100%, or as a decimal, 0 to 1). Mark the x-axis with the class boundaries.
Step 5. Plot your points. Note: Each point should be plotted on the upper limit of the class boundary. For
example, if your first-class boundary is 1 to 10, the point should be plotted at 10.
Step 6. Connect the dots with straight lines. the ogive is one continuous line, made up of several smaller lines
that connect pairs of dots, moving from left to right. The finished graph for this sample data.

OGIVE . An ogive (oh-jive) is a type

of frequency polygon that shows cumulative frequencies. An ogive graph plots cumulative frequency on the y-
axis and class boundaries along the x=axis. It is very similar to histogram, only instead of rectangles, an ogive
has the single point marking where the top right of the rectangle would be.

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