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Mathematics

The heights (in nearest cm) of 63 students of a certain school are given in the following frequency distribution table:

Height (in cm)Number of students
1509
15112
15210
1538
15411
1557
1566

Find :

(i) Median

(ii) Lower quartile (Q1)

(iii) Upper quartile (Q3)

(iv) Interquartile range from the above data.

Measures of Central Tendency

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Answer

The given varieties are arranged in ascending order.

Cumulative frequency distribution table :

Height (in cm)Number of studentsCumulative frequency
15099
1511221 (9 + 12)
1521031 (21 + 10)
153839 (31 + 8)
1541150 (39 + 11)
155757 (50 + 7)
156663 (57 + 6)

Here number of observations, n = 63, which is odd.

(i) By formula,

Median=n+12thobservationMedian=63+12thobservationMedian=642thobservationMedian=32thobservation\Rightarrow \text{Median} = \dfrac{\text{n} + 1}{2} \text{th} \text{observation} \\[1em] \Rightarrow \text{Median} = \dfrac{63 + 1}{2} \text{th} \text{observation} \\[1em] \Rightarrow \text{Median} = \dfrac{64}{2} \text{th} \text{observation} \\[1em] \Rightarrow \text{Median} = 32 \text{th} \text{observation}

From table,

32 nd term is 153.

Hence, median = 153.

(ii) By formula,

Lower Quartile = (n+14)\Big(\dfrac{\text{n} + 1}{4}\Big) th term

= (63+14)=644\Big(\dfrac{63 + 1}{4}\Big) = \dfrac{64}{4} th term

= 16 th term

From table,

16 th term is 151.

Hence, lower quartile = 151.

(iii) By formula,

Upper Quartile = (3(n+1)4)\Big(\dfrac{3(\text{n} + 1)}{4}\Big) th term

= (3×(63+1)4)\Big(\dfrac{3 \times (63 + 1)}{4}\Big) th term

= (3×644)=1924\Big(\dfrac{3 \times 64}{4}\Big) = \dfrac{192}{4} th term

= 48th term

From table,

48 th term is 154.

Hence, Upper Quartile = 154.

(iv) By formula,

Inter quartile range = Upper quartile - Lower quartile

= 154 - 151

= 3.

Hence, the inter-quartile range is 3.

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