Statistics Explained: Mean, Median, Mode, Variance & Standard Deviation
Statistics helps us understand and analyze numerical data in a meaningful way. From exam marks to survey results, statistics allows us to summarize large data sets using a few powerful measures.
- School students (Class 9–12)
- Competitive exam aspirants
- Beginners struggling with statistics formulas
1. What Is Statistics?
Statistics is the branch of mathematics that deals with the collection, organization, analysis, and interpretation of numerical data.
Instead of studying every value individually, statistics helps us describe data using:
- Measures of central tendency
- Measures of dispersion
2. Measures of Central Tendency
These measures tell us about the central or typical value of a data set.
Mean (Arithmetic Average)
Data: 2, 4, 6, 8, 10
Sum = 30
Mean = 30 ÷ 5 = 6
Mean is widely used but can be affected by extreme values.
Median
Median is the middle value when data is arranged in ascending or descending order.
Data: 3, 5, 7, 9, 11
Median = 7
Data: 4, 6, 8, 10
Median = (6 + 8) ÷ 2 = 7
Median is preferred when data contains extreme values.
Mode
Mode is the value that occurs most frequently.
Mode = 3
A data set may have:
- No mode
- One mode (unimodal)
- Two modes (bimodal)
3. Relationship Between Mean, Median & Mode
This relationship is useful for moderately skewed distributions and is often asked in exams.
4. Measures of Dispersion
While averages show the center, dispersion measures show how spread out the data is.
Variance
- Find the mean
- Subtract mean from each value
- Square each deviation
- Find the average
Variance is expressed in squared units, which makes interpretation difficult.
Standard Deviation
Standard deviation is the most important dispersion measure because:
- It uses original units
- It measures consistency
- It is widely used in exams and real-life data analysis
High standard deviation → data widely spread
5. Why Standard Deviation Is Important
Standard deviation helps compare consistency between two data sets.
Class B: Mean = 60, SD = 12
Class A is more consistent.
6. Common Mistakes Students Make
- Forgetting to arrange data before finding median
- Using mean instead of median in skewed data
- Missing squares in variance calculation
- Confusing variance and standard deviation
7. How Statistics Appears in Exams
- Direct formula-based questions
- Data interpretation tables
- Comparison using SD
- MCQs on conceptual understanding
8. Practice with Solved Problems & Calculators
👉 Mean, Median & Mode Solved Problems
👉 Variance & Standard Deviation Solved Problems
👉 Mean / Median / Mode Calculator
👉 Standard Deviation Calculator
9. Final Thoughts
Statistics is not about memorizing formulas. It is about understanding data behavior. Once you understand why measures are used, calculations become much easier.
Use this page as your foundation and strengthen it with solved problems and practice.