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Match the cumulative frequency curves with their corresponding box plots.
Is it the fastest swimmer, the fastest runner or the fastest cyclist who wins the Olympic Triathlon?
Six samples were taken from two distributions but they got muddled up. Can you work out which list is which?
Can you make sense of information about trees in order to maximise the profits of a forestry company?
How can we find out answers to questions like this if people often lie?
"Too much sleep is deadly" proclaimed the newspaper headline. Is this true?
A geographical survey: answer the tiny questionnaire and then analyse all the collected responses...
Displaying one-variable and two-variable data can be straightforward; what about three or more?
How was the data for this problem compiled? A guided tour through the process.
Where do people fly to from London? What is good and bad about these representations?
This pilot collection of resources is designed to introduce key statistical ideas and help students to deepen their understanding.
Are you at risk of being a victim of crime? How does your perception of that risk compare with the facts and figures?
How do decisions about scoring affect who wins a combined event such as the decathlon?
Simple models which help us to investigate how epidemics grow and die out.
Substitution and Transposition all in one! How fiendish can these codes get?
Here is the start of a six-part challenge. Can you get to the end and crack the final message?
Can you make sense of the charts and diagrams that are created and used by sports competitors, trainers and statisticians?
Can you make sense of the charts and diagrams that are created and used by sports competitors, trainers and statisticians?
This article explores the process of making and testing hypotheses.
Use your skill and judgement to match the sets of random data.
Like all sports rankings, the cricket ratings involve some maths. In this case, they use a mathematical technique known as exponential weighting. For those who want to know more, read on.