StatisticsTopic Summary

Knowledge Organiser: Range and Interquartile Range (IQR)

Part of Range & IQR · GCSE GCSE Mathematics revision

This topic summary covers Knowledge Organiser: Range and Interquartile Range (IQR) within Range & IQR for GCSE Mathematics. Revise Range & IQR in Statistics for GCSE Mathematics with 12 exam-style questions and 20 flashcards. This topic appears less often, but it can still be a useful differentiator on mixed-topic papers. It is section 8 of 8 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 8 of 8

Practice

12 questions

Recall

20 flashcards

Knowledge Organiser: Range and Interquartile Range (IQR)

Key Terms
  • Range: Total spread of data (highest − lowest)
  • Quartile: A value that divides ordered data into four equal parts
  • Q1 (Lower Quartile): 25% of data lies below this value
  • Q2 (Median): 50% of data lies below this value
  • Q3 (Upper Quartile): 75% of data lies below this value
  • IQR: Interquartile range — spread of the middle 50% of data
Must-Know Facts
  • Always sort data into ascending order before finding quartiles
  • Range is affected by outliers; IQR is not
  • IQR is always less than or equal to the range
  • A smaller IQR means data is more consistent (less spread)
  • A larger IQR means data is more variable
  • Use IQR when comparing consistency between two datasets
  • IQR and range share the same units as the original data
Key Formulas
  • Range = highest value − lowest value
  • IQR = Q3 − Q1
  • Q1 = median of the lower half of data
  • Q3 = median of the upper half of data
Common Mistakes
  • Not ordering data first: Always sort data in ascending order before finding quartiles or range
  • Including the median in quartile halves: For an odd number of values, exclude the median when finding Q1 and Q3
  • Range vs IQR: Range uses all values (affected by outliers); IQR uses only the middle 50% (more reliable)
  • IQR = Q3 − Q1, not Q3 ÷ Q1: Subtract the lower quartile from the upper quartile

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Read this section alongside the surrounding pages in Range & IQR. That gives you the full topic sequence instead of a single isolated revision point.

Practice Questions for Range & IQR

The range of a set of data is calculated by:

  • A. Adding all the values together
  • B. Dividing the total by the number of values
  • C. Subtracting the smallest value from the largest value
  • D. Finding the middle value when ordered
1 markfoundation

Explain why the interquartile range (IQR) is sometimes preferred over the range as a measure of spread.

2 marksstandard

Quick Recall Flashcards

What are quartiles?
Quartiles are values that divide an ordered dataset into four equal parts: - Q1 (Lower quartile): 25% below - Q2 (Median): 50% below - Q3 (Upper quartile): 75% below
What is the range?
The range is the difference between the highest value and the lowest value in a dataset. Range = Highest value - Lowest value

12 questions on Range & IQR — practise free

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