Descriptive Statistics Practice Quiz with a Step-by-Step Interactive Lesson
Use the question set below to practice descriptive statistics skills that appear everywhere in math and data literacy: finding the mean, median, and mode, calculating the range, identifying quartiles \((Q_1, Q_3)\) and the interquartile range (IQR), building a five-number summary, reading a box-and-whisker plot, and interpreting frequency, relative frequency, and percent. The lesson also introduces outliers using the 1.5×IQR rule and the meaning of variance and standard deviation. If you want a refresher, click Start lesson to open a step-by-step guide with examples and quick checks.
How this descriptive statistics practice works
- 1. Take the practice set: answer the descriptive statistics questions below.
- 2. Open the lesson (optional): review formulas, step-by-step methods, and common mistakes for mean, median, mode, quartiles, and IQR.
- 3. Retry: return to the question set and apply the descriptive statistics steps immediately.
What you will learn in the descriptive statistics lesson
Data basics & vocabulary
- How to order a data set and count values correctly
- Frequency and relative frequency for interpreting lists and tables
- Core language: quartiles, percent, five-number summary, and outliers
Measures of center
- Compute and interpret mean, median, and mode
- Choose a good "typical value" when data has outliers or is skewed
- Common errors: forgetting to sort before finding the median
Measures of spread
- Find the range (max - min) for overall spread
- Find quartiles and the interquartile range (IQR) for robust spread
- Connect IQR to box plots and outlier detection
Box plots, outliers & standard deviation
- Build a five-number summary and read a box-and-whisker plot
- Identify outliers with the 1.5×IQR rule
- Understand variance and standard deviation as measures of variability
Practice set
Descriptive Statistics practice questions with instant score
Answer all 10 questions below, then get your final score and a mistake review at the end so you know exactly what to improve.
What is the median of the data set \(\{1,3,5\}\)?
Correct answer: C. 3
Explanation: Ordering the values gives \(1,3,5\); the middle value is \(3\).
For the data set \(\{1,2,3,4\}\), what is the interquartile range?
Correct answer: C. \(2\)
Explanation: The first quartile is \(Q_1 = \frac{1+2}{2} = 1.5\), the third quartile is \(Q_3 = \frac{3+4}{2} = 3.5\), so IQR = \(3.5 - 1.5 = 2\).
What is the mean of the data set \(\{2,4,6\}\)?
Correct answer: C. \(4\)
Explanation: Mean = \(\frac{2+4+6}{3} = 4\).
What is the mode of \(\{1,2,2,3,4\}\)?
Correct answer: D. \(2\)
Explanation: Value \(2\) appears most often.
What is the range of \(\{3,7,9\}\)?
Correct answer: B. \(6\)
Explanation: Range = \(9 - 3 = 6\).
What is the median of \(\{5,8,10,12\}\)?
Correct answer: D. \(9\)
Explanation: Sorted: \(\{5,8,10,12\}\), median = \(\frac{8+10}{2} = 9\).
What is the first quartile \(Q_1\) of \(\{2,4,6,8\}\)?
Correct answer: C. \(3\)
Explanation: First quartile is the median of the lower half: \(Q_1 = \frac{2+4}{2} = 3\).
What is the third quartile \(Q_3\) of \(\{2,4,6,8\}\)?
Correct answer: A. \(7\)
Explanation: Third quartile is the median of the upper half: \(Q_3 = \frac{6+8}{2} = 7\).
What is the mean of \(\{1,1,1,1\}\)?
Correct answer: B. \(1\)
Explanation: All values are 1, so the mean is 1.
For \(\{1,2,3,4,5\}\), what is the mode?
Correct answer: C. No mode
Explanation: No value repeats, so there is no mode.
Result
Your score: 0 / 10
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