Applications of Bar Graphs: Background You’ll Need 3

Changes in Percentages

When examining data, it can sometimes be helpful to compare two values by taking their absolute change or their relative change. It can be challenging, though, to compare relative change when data are presented as percentages. Before we try to understand how to apply these comparisons to percentages, please refresh your understanding of absolute and relative difference in the Recall box below.

Recall

When computing absolute change and relative change between two values, we need one value that we think of as the starting point and the other that represents the value after some change. We’ll call the starting point value the reference value and the second one will be the new value. We’ll use these terms in the skill explanations below.

Core skill:

Core skill:

It can be tricky to handle the units when they are in percentage points. Use this rule of thumb when the original units are percentage points:

  • The absolute difference will be in percentage points, indicating the change occurred in a number of percentage points.
  • The relative difference will be expressed with the [latex]\%[/latex] symbol, indicating that the amount of something has changed by some percent relative to its original amount.

Example

Consider a small town that suffered the downsizing of a large manufacturing plant. In 2010, [latex]60[/latex]% of the town’s workers were employed in the plant. But in 2011, only [latex]27[/latex]% of the town’s workers remained.

What was the absolute change in the percentage of workers employed at the plant?

What was the relative change?

Now you try this scenario about graduation rates.

In 2013, [latex]80[/latex]% of the original class of 2013 (who started in 2009) graduated from Valley High School, and in 2014, [latex]73[/latex]% of the original class of 2014 graduated.

question 10

question 11

question 12

Now that you’ve gained some experience reading and interpreting graphs that represent percentages, it’s time to move on to the next section and activity.