Interpreting the Mean and Median of a Data Set: Background You’ll Need 3

We saw that the median and the mean employee salaries for January were the same. What understanding can we take from that information?

Interactive Example

What can we understand about the median and mean employee salaries for January being the same? Fill in the blanks to answer the following questions.

  1. The median of the data set implies that ____________ made more than [latex]\$4,500[/latex] in January and _________ made less.
  2. The mean of the data set implies that if the January salaries had been added up and evenly distributed across all six employees, each person would have received ________________.

Comparing Mean and Median

What happens to the mean and median if we change one of the values in the data set?

Recall that the data set of employee salaries from February includes a big raise from one employee. First calculate the median of this set to answer Question 8 below, then consider how we might expect the mean of the February salaries compares to the mean of the January salaries.

Before you get the median and the mean from the technology, or before you calculate the mean by hand, first think about what you think will be true about the February mean compared to the January mean and why.

question 8

question 9

question 10

Interactive example

Was the mean you calculated for February salaries higher, lower, or similar? What do you think caused that to be true? Click below for a discussion after you enter your answers to Questions 8 – 10.

Now let’s consider a slightly different question.

question 11

It may take some time before you really feel comfortable interpreting means and medians and understanding what they imply about a data set. A key idea to take from this activity is that, while the median stays relatively fixed in a data set if one value changes by a large amount, the mean does not. This tells us that the mean is sensitive to the presence of extreme values in the data set.