๐ 9 min read | Class 9โ12 | FBISE ยท CBSE ยท IGCSE ยท O-Levels ยท IB
You have collected 80 students' exam scores. Listing every number tells you very little at a glance. Group those scores into intervals โ 40โ49, 50โ59, 60โ69 โ and draw a bar for each group's frequency, and suddenly a picture emerges: where most students scored, how spread out the results were, whether the distribution is symmetric or skewed. That picture is a histogram. It is one of the most important tools in statistics for understanding continuous data, and it appears in virtually every FBISE, IGCSE, O-Level, and IB statistics paper.
What Is a Histogram?
A histogram is a bar chart used to display the frequency distribution of continuous numerical data that has been grouped into equal-width intervals called class intervals or bins. Unlike a regular bar chart, there are no gaps between the bars โ the touching bars reflect that the data is continuous and flows from one interval into the next.
The key features of a histogram are the x-axis (showing the class intervals), the y-axis (showing frequency or frequency density), and the bars whose height represents how many data values fall in each interval.
Step-by-Step: Drawing a Histogram
The heights (in cm) of 30 students were recorded. The grouped frequency table is shown below. Draw a histogram.
| Height (cm) | Frequency |
|---|---|
| 140 โ 149 | 3 |
| 150 โ 159 | 8 |
| 160 โ 169 | 12 |
| 170 โ 179 | 5 |
| 180 โ 189 | 2 |
Draw and label the axes. The horizontal (x) axis shows heights in cm. The vertical (y) axis shows frequency. Mark equal-width intervals on the x-axis: 140, 150, 160, 170, 180, 190.
Draw bars with no gaps. For each class interval, draw a bar whose height equals the frequency. The bar for 160โ169 is the tallest (height = 12).
Add a title. A good title is: "Heights of 30 Students (cm)".
Interpret the shape. This histogram is slightly right-skewed โ most students cluster in the 160โ169 range, with fewer at the taller end.
Describing Histogram Shapes
The shape of a histogram communicates important information about the data's distribution. You will often be asked to describe this in exams.
| Shape | What It Looks Like | What It Means |
|---|---|---|
| Symmetric / Bell-shaped | Peak in the middle, tails equal on both sides | Mean โ Median; data is normally distributed |
| Positively skewed (right) | Peak on the left, long tail stretches right | A few unusually high values; mean > median |
| Negatively skewed (left) | Peak on the right, long tail stretches left | A few unusually low values; mean < median |
| Uniform | All bars roughly equal height | Values distributed evenly across all intervals |
| Bimodal | Two distinct peaks | Two separate clusters in the data |
Real-Life Applications
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Healthcare: Epidemiologists use histograms of patient ages or test results to identify at-risk groups and plan resource allocation.
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Meteorology: Monthly rainfall totals over many years are displayed as histograms to reveal whether a region's rainfall is consistent or highly variable.
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Manufacturing: Quality engineers histogram product measurements (diameter, weight) to check whether production is within tolerance limits.
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Education: Schools plot exam score distributions as histograms to evaluate whether assessments were appropriately challenging for the cohort.
Common Mistakes Students Make
Frequently Asked Questions
Try the Histogram Generator
Enter your grouped frequency data and generate a perfectly drawn histogram in seconds โ with labelled axes, correct bar widths, and an instant shape description.
๐ Open the Histogram Generator โ