StatisticsTopic Summary

Knowledge Organiser: Averages (Mean, Median, Mode)

Part of Averages · GCSE GCSE Mathematics revision

This topic summary covers Knowledge Organiser: Averages (Mean, Median, Mode) within Averages for GCSE Mathematics. Revise Averages in Statistics for GCSE Mathematics with 14 exam-style questions and 20 flashcards. This is a high-frequency topic, so it is worth revising until the explanation feels precise and repeatable. It is section 7 of 7 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 7 of 7

Practice

14 questions

Recall

20 flashcards

Knowledge Organiser: Averages (Mean, Median, Mode)

Key Terms
  • Mean: Sum of all values divided by the number of values
  • Median: The middle value when data is arranged in order
  • Mode: The value that appears most often
  • Outlier: An extreme value that skews the mean
  • Bimodal: Data with two modes (equally frequent values)
  • Average: A single representative value summarising a dataset
Must-Know Facts
  • Mean uses every value in the dataset; outliers distort it
  • Median is unaffected by extreme outliers — use for skewed data
  • Mode is the only average that works for categorical (non-numerical) data
  • For an even number of values, median = mean of the two middle values
  • Data can have no mode, one mode, or multiple modes
  • To find a missing value: missing = (mean × n) − sum of known values
  • The mean should always lie between the minimum and maximum values
Key Formulas
  • Mean = (sum of all values) ÷ (number of values)
  • Median position = (n + 1) ÷ 2 (for n values)
  • Missing value = (mean × n) − sum of known values
Common Mistakes
  • Mean with even number of values: Median is the average of the two middle values — add them and divide by 2
  • Mode vs most common: Mode is the value that appears most often — there can be more than one mode or none
  • Mean affected by outliers: A single very high/low value pulls the mean but not the median — choose the appropriate average
  • Median position: For n values, median is at position (n+1) ÷ 2 — don't just pick the middle value without finding its position

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Practice Questions for Averages

What is the mode of this dataset? 3, 5, 5, 7, 9, 3, 5, 11

  • A. 3
  • B. 5
  • C. 7
  • D. 11
1 markfoundation

Class A has test scores: 55, 62, 58, 60, 61, 63, 57. Class B has test scores: 20, 60, 62, 63, 61, 58, 64. A teacher says 'Class A has a higher mean score, so Class A performed better overall.' Give a mathematical reason why this conclusion may be misleading.

3 markshigher

Quick Recall Flashcards

What is the mean?
The mean is the sum of all values divided by the number of values. It's also called the arithmetic average.
What is the mode?
The mode is the value that appears most frequently in a dataset. A dataset can have no mode, one mode, or multiple modes.

14 questions on Averages — practise free

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