๐Ÿ“˜ Statistics Basics

Mean, Median & Mode Explained

Your complete guide to measures of central tendency โ€” with examples, pitfalls, and real-world uses.


๐Ÿ• 8 min read  |  Class 9โ€“12  |  FBISE ยท CBSE ยท IGCSE ยท O-Levels ยท IB

Imagine your teacher hands back a maths test and says, "The average score was 72." But your friend who scored 55 says, "That average feels unfair โ€” a few people in the top dragged it up." Your teacher might actually be better off reporting the middle score, or even the most common score. This is exactly why statisticians use three different measures of central tendency: the mean, the median, and the mode. Each one tells a different story about the same data.

What Is the Mean?

The mean (also called the arithmetic mean or average) is found by adding all values in a data set and dividing by how many values there are. It is the most widely used measure of central tendency, and it is what most people mean when they say "average."

Mean ( xฬ„ ) = (Sum of all values) รท (Number of values)
xฬ„ = ฮฃx / n

The Greek capital letter sigma (ฮฃ) means "sum of," and n is the count of values in the data set.

Step-by-Step Example โ€” Mean

A student scores the following marks in six weekly quizzes: 62, 75, 80, 55, 90, 78.

๐Ÿ“‹ Finding the Mean
1

Add all values:

62 + 75 + 80 + 55 + 90 + 78 = 440
2

Count the values: There are 6 quiz scores.

3

Divide:

Mean = 440 รท 6 = 73.33

The student's mean quiz score is approximately 73.3.

What Is the Median?

The median is the middle value when all data is arranged in order from smallest to largest (or largest to smallest). If there is an even number of values, the median is the mean of the two middle values. The median is especially useful when your data contains extreme outliers โ€” values that are unusually high or low.

Step-by-Step Example โ€” Odd Number of Values

Data: 14, 7, 21, 3, 18

๐Ÿ“‹ Finding the Median (Odd Count)
1

Arrange in order:

3, 7, 14, 18, 21
2

Find the middle position: With 5 values, the middle is position (5+1)/2 = 3rd value.

3

Read the value:

Median = 14

Step-by-Step Example โ€” Even Number of Values

Data: 5, 12, 19, 23, 31, 40

๐Ÿ“‹ Finding the Median (Even Count)
1

Data is already ordered. There are 6 values.

2

Two middle values: positions 3 and 4 โ†’ values 19 and 23.

3

Average them:

Median = (19 + 23) รท 2 = 21

What Is the Mode?

The mode is the value that appears most frequently in a data set. A data set can have one mode (unimodal), two modes (bimodal), or more than two modes (multimodal). If every value appears the same number of times, the data set has no mode. Mode is the only measure that works for non-numerical (categorical) data.

Step-by-Step Example โ€” Mode

Data: 4, 7, 2, 9, 7, 3, 7, 5, 2, 7

๐Ÿ“‹ Finding the Mode
1

Tally frequencies:

2 โ†’ 2 times | 3 โ†’ 1 time | 4 โ†’ 1 time | 5 โ†’ 1 time | 7 โ†’ 4 times | 9 โ†’ 1 time
2

Highest frequency: 7 appears 4 times โ€” more than any other value.

3
Mode = 7

Mean vs Median vs Mode โ€” When to Use Which?

Measure Best Used When Weakness
Mean Data is symmetric with no extreme outliers Dragged by very high or very low values
Median Data has outliers (e.g., income data) Ignores the actual values of most data points
Mode Categorical data; most popular item May not exist or may not be central
๐Ÿ’ก Real example: Pakistan's median monthly income is a better indicator than mean income, because a small number of very wealthy households would pull the mean upward and make the country appear richer than most people experience.

Real-Life Applications

  • ๐Ÿซ
    Exam results: Schools use the mean to compute GPA-style averages, but teachers often look at the median to understand how the "typical" student performed.
  • ๐Ÿ›’
    Retail: Clothing stores use mode to decide which size to stock in the largest quantity.
  • ๐ŸŒก๏ธ
    Weather: The mean daily temperature over a month tells meteorologists if a month was unusually warm or cold.
  • ๐Ÿ’ต
    Economics: Government policy is often guided by median household income rather than mean income to avoid distortion from billionaires.
  • โšฝ
    Sports: A cricket player's batting average (mean) summarises their overall scoring ability across all matches.

Common Mistakes Students Make

โš ๏ธ Forgetting to sort data before finding the median. This is the #1 error. Always arrange values in ascending order first.
โš ๏ธ Dividing by the wrong n for the mean. If data has repeated values written once with a frequency, make sure to use the total frequency (ฮฃf), not the number of distinct values.
โš ๏ธ Saying there is "no mode" when there are two modes. Bimodal data is very common โ€” list both modes, don't discard one.
โš ๏ธ Confusing mean with median. In exam questions, "average" usually means mean, but read carefully โ€” some syllabi (especially IGCSE) explicitly ask for median for grouped data.

Frequently Asked Questions

Yes. If two values share the highest frequency, both are modes (bimodal). If three or more values share the highest frequency, the data is multimodal. If every value appears equally often, statisticians say there is no mode.
Because the mean uses the actual numerical value of every data point in its calculation. If one value is extremely large, it raises the sum โ€” and therefore the mean. The median only depends on position (the middle rank), so one extreme value cannot shift it much.
No. The mean is often a decimal that does not appear in your list. For example, the mean of {2, 3} is 2.5, which is not in the data. Only the mode is guaranteed to be an actual data value.
All three are tested, but mean and median receive the most exam weight. For grouped frequency tables, you will often be asked to estimate the mean using the midpoint method, and the median using cumulative frequency or the median formula.

Try the Mean / Median / Mode Calculator

Don't do the arithmetic by hand every time. STEMBridge Stats' free calculator finds all three measures instantly โ€” and shows you the working step by step, just like your teacher would.

๐Ÿงฎ Open the Calculator โ†’