Geographical SkillsTopic Summary

Topic Summary: Graph Skills and Data Interpretation

Part of Graph, Chart and Data SkillsGCSE Geography

This topic summary covers Topic Summary: Graph Skills and Data Interpretation within Graph, Chart and Data Skills for GCSE Geography. Revise Graph, Chart and Data Skills in Geographical Skills for GCSE Geography with 15 exam-style questions and 20 flashcards. This topic shows up very often in GCSE exams, so students should be able to explain it clearly, not just recognise the term. It is section 13 of 13 in this topic. Use this topic summary to connect the idea to the wider topic before moving on to questions and flashcards.

Topic position

Section 13 of 13

Practice

15 questions

Recall

20 flashcards

Topic Summary: Graph Skills and Data Interpretation

Graph Types
  • Line graph: continuous data over time
  • Bar chart: discrete categories
  • Histogram: frequency of grouped continuous data (bars touch)
  • Pie chart: parts of a whole (proportions only)
  • Scatter graph: correlation between two variables
  • Climate graph: temperature (line) + precipitation (bars), 12 months
  • Population pyramid: age-sex structure, males left / females right
  • Choropleth: variable distributed across geographic areas
TACT Framework
  • T — Trend: overall direction with start/end values
  • A — Anomaly: data point that doesn't fit trend + reason
  • C — Comparison: direct comparison of highest vs lowest with both values
  • T — Total/Terminology: specific figures with units; precise vocabulary
  • Correlation ≠ causation — ALWAYS
  • 3–5 well-chosen figures beat 12 passively listed ones
Climate Graph Steps
  • 1. Hottest month (°C) and coldest month (°C)
  • 2. Annual range = hottest − coldest
  • 3. Wettest month (mm) and driest month (mm)
  • 4. Total annual precipitation (mm)
  • 5. Classify climate type from the pattern
  • Small range (<10°C) = maritime/tropical; large range (>20°C) = continental/desert
Population Pyramid and Stats
  • Wide base = high birth rate (LIC); narrow base = low birth rate (HIC)
  • Tapers fast upward = high death rate / low life expectancy
  • Stays wide = low death rate / high life expectancy (HIC)
  • Bulge in working age = immigration or baby boom
  • Mean: best for evenly distributed data
  • Median: best when outliers present (income, house prices)
  • IQR = Q3 − Q1 (spread of middle 50%)
  • % change = ((new−old) ÷ old) × 100

Keep building this topic

Read this section alongside the surrounding pages in Graph, Chart and Data Skills. That gives you the full topic sequence instead of a single isolated revision point.

Practice Questions for Graph, Chart and Data Skills

A student wants to compare the number of tourists visiting five different countries in 2023. Which type of graph is most appropriate?

  • A. Line graph
  • B. Bar chart
  • C. Scatter graph
  • D. Histogram
1 markfoundation

Describe the difference between primary data and secondary data.

2 marksstandard

Quick Recall Flashcards

What is a trend in data?
A general pattern of change over time or between categories.
What is an anomaly in data?
A result that does not fit the overall pattern.

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