Data Handling — Pictographs, Bar Graphs, and Tables
1. What Is Data?
DATA is a COLLECTION of INFORMATION or FACTS.
'When you count how many students in your class like different fruits — THAT is data. Data helps us understand the world around us.'
Why We Organize Data:
- To make it EASIER to understand.
- To find PATTERNS quickly.
- To SHARE information clearly.
Ways to Organize Data:
- Pictographs (using pictures)
- Bar graphs (using bars)
- Tables (using rows and columns)
- Tally marks (using lines)
2. Pictographs
A PICTOGRAPH uses PICTURES or SYMBOLS to represent data.
'Each picture stands for a certain number of items. The KEY tells you what each picture represents.'
Example:
Favorite fruits of Class 4 students:
| Fruit | Number of Students | Pictograph |
|---|---|---|
| Apple | 10 | 🍎🍎🍎🍎🍎 (each 🍎 = 2 students) |
| Banana | 8 | 🍌🍌🍌🍌 |
| Orange | 6 | 🍊🍊🍊 |
| Mango | 12 | 🥭🥭🥭🥭🥭🥭 |
Key: Each fruit symbol = 2 students.
Reading a Pictograph:
- Look at the KEY — what does one symbol represent?
- Count the symbols for each category.
- MULTIPLY the count by the value in the key.
Question: How many students chose Mango? Answer: 6 symbols × 2 students each = 12 students.
Creating a Pictograph:
Step 1: Collect the data. Step 2: Choose a SYMBOL and decide what number it represents (the KEY). Step 3: Draw the correct number of symbols for each category. Step 4: Give the pictograph a TITLE.
'When drawing a pictograph, use HALF a symbol if needed. If one symbol = 4 students, then half a symbol = 2 students.'
3. Bar Graphs
A BAR GRAPH uses BARS of different heights to represent data.
'TALLER bar = MORE items. All bars have the SAME width — only the height changes.'
Parts of a Bar Graph:
| Part | Description |
|---|---|
| Title | Tells what the graph is about |
| Horizontal Axis (X-axis) | Shows categories |
| Vertical Axis (Y-axis) | Shows the scale (numbers) |
| Bars | Represent the values |
| Scale | Tells what each unit represents |
Example:
Number of books read by Class 4 students in a month:
Books Read in April
10 | ██
9 | ██
8 | ██ ██
7 | ██ ██ ██
6 | ██ ██ ██
5 | ██ ██ ██
4 | ██ ██ ██ ██
3 | ██ ██ ██ ██
2 | ██ ██ ██ ██ ██
1 | ██ ██ ██ ██ ██
————————————————
Ria Sam Raj Ali
Reading the Graph:
- Ria read 9 books.
- Sam read 7 books.
- Raj read 6 books.
- Ali read 4 books.
Question: Who read the MOST books? Who read the LEAST? Answer: Ria read the most (9). Ali read the least (4).
Scale:
The scale on the Y-axis shows what each line represents.
'If the scale goes 0, 2, 4, 6, 8, 10... then each line represents 2 units. Read carefully!'
4. Simple Tables
A TABLE organizes data into ROWS (horizontal) and COLUMNS (vertical).
Example — Marks of Students:
| Student | Mathematics | Science | English | Total |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Ria | 85 | 90 | 78 | 253 |
| Sam | 92 | 88 | 85 | 265 |
| Raj | 78 | 82 | 90 | 250 |
| Ali | 95 | 85 | 88 | 268 |
Reading a Table:
- Read ACROSS a row to find information about ONE item.
- Read DOWN a column to COMPARE items.
Questions:
- What did Sam score in Science? → 88
- Who scored the highest in Mathematics? → Ali (95)
- What is Ria's total? → 253
5. Tally Marks
TALLY marks are a quick way to COUNT and RECORD data.
'Each group of 5 tally marks looks like this: |||| (four vertical lines and one diagonal cross).'
| Number | Tally Marks |
|---|---|
| 1 | |
| 2 | |
| 3 | |
| 4 | |
| 5 | ~~ |
| 6 | ~~ |
| 7 | ~~ |
| 8 | ~~ |
| 9 | ~~ |
| 10 | ~~ |
'Always group tally marks in FIVES. The fifth mark goes ACROSS the first four. This makes counting much EASIER.'
6. Interpreting Data — Key Questions
When looking at a graph or table, ask:
- What is the HIGHEST value? (The tallest bar / most frequent item)
- What is the LOWEST value? (The shortest bar / least frequent item)
- What is the DIFFERENCE between the highest and lowest?
- What is the TOTAL of all values?
- What is the MOST COMMON category?
Example:
A shop sold the following numbers of ice creams in a week:
- Monday: 30
- Tuesday: 25
- Wednesday: 15
- Thursday: 20
- Friday: 35
- Saturday: 50
- Sunday: 45
Questions:
- On which day were the MOST ice creams sold? → Saturday (50)
- On which day were the LEAST sold? → Wednesday (15)
- Difference between highest and lowest? → 50 - 15 = 35
- Total ice creams sold? → 30 + 25 + 15 + 20 + 35 + 50 + 45 = 220
- Which day had DOUBLE the sales of Wednesday? → Saturday (50 = 2 × 25) — actually Friday (35 is not double 15), Saturday (50 is not double 15)... None exactly doubles Wednesday's 15.
7. Common Mistakes
- Forgetting to check the KEY in a pictograph: 'Never assume one picture = one item. Always check the KEY first. One picture might represent 5 or 10 items!'
- Misreading the scale on a bar graph: 'If the scale goes 0, 5, 10, 15... and a bar reaches the line between 10 and 15, the value is 12 or 13 — NOT 10 or 15. Read the scale carefully.'
- Confusing rows and columns in a table: 'Read ACROSS for information about ONE item. Read DOWN to compare items.'
- Tally mark errors: 'Always group in FIVES. The fifth tally crosses the first four. This makes counting accurate.'
8. Key Facts to Remember
- 'Data is information collected about something.'
- 'A PICTOGRAPH uses pictures. Always check the KEY.'
- 'A BAR GRAPH uses bars. TALLER bar = MORE.'
- 'A TABLE organizes data in rows and columns.'
- 'TALLY marks group in FIVES for easy counting.'
- 'Graphs and tables help us see PATTERNS in data quickly.'
9. Self-Test
Q1: In a pictograph, each symbol represents 5 students. How many symbols would represent 25 students?
Q2: A bar graph shows favorite colors. The bar for Blue reaches 12, Red reaches 8, Green reaches 6. How many more students like Blue than Red?
Q3: Create a tally mark representation for the number 8.
Q4: Using the table below, answer the questions:
| Student | Apples Eaten | Bananas Eaten |
|---|---|---|
| Ria | 4 | 6 |
| Sam | 7 | 3 |
| Raj | 5 | 5 |
(a) How many apples did Sam eat? (b) Who ate equal numbers of apples and bananas? (c) How many total bananas were eaten?
Q5: The pictograph key says: 🍕 = 2 pizzas. 3 full pizzas + 1 half pizza symbol = how many pizzas?
Q6: In a bar graph, the scale increases by 2s: 0, 2, 4, 6, 8, 10. A bar is at the 3rd line after 0. What value does it represent?
Answers:
A1: 5 symbols (25 ÷ 5 = 5).
A2: 12 - 8 = 4 students.
A3: ||| ||| (one group of 5 + three singles).
A4: (a) 7 apples (b) Raj (5 apples and 5 bananas) (c) 6 + 3 + 5 = 14 bananas.
A5: 3 full = 6 pizzas + half = 1 pizza = 7 pizzas total.
A6: The 3rd line after 0 is at 6 on the scale (0, 2, 4, 6).
