Line Plots with Fractional Data
Line Plots with Fractional Data
A line plot is a graph that displays data as points or check marks above a number line, showing how often each value occurs. In fourth grade, you will often see line plots where the data points are fractions, such as halves (21â), quarters (41â), or eighths (81â).
How to Create a Line Plot with Fractions
Let's say you measured the lengths of several small objects in inches and got these results: 41â, 21â, 43â, 41â, 21â, 43â, 41â
Here is how you make a line plot for this data:
- Draw a Number Line: Since your data includes quarters and halves, draw a number line from 0 to 1. Make tick marks for every quarter: 0, 41â, 21â (which is the same as 42â), 43â, and 1.
- Plot the Data: For every measurement in your list, draw an "X" above that fraction on the number line.
- There are three 41âs, so draw three X's stacked above 41â.
- There are two 21âs, so draw two X's stacked above 21â.
- There are two 43âs, so draw two X's stacked above 43â.
Reading and Analyzing the Data
Once your line plot is created, you can use it to answer questions by counting, adding, or subtracting fractions.
Question 1: What is the total length of all objects that measured 21â inch? Look at your line plot. There are two X's above 21â. To find the total length, add those fractions together: 21â+21â=22â=1Â inch
Question 2: How many measurements are greater than 21â inch? Look at the fractions to the right of 21â on the number line. The only data points we have greater than 21â are at 43â. Count the X's above 43â. There are 2 measurements greater than 21â inch.
Question 3: What is the difference in length between the longest and shortest object? The longest measurement recorded on the plot is 43â inch, and the shortest is 41â inch. Subtract the shortest from the longest: 43ââ41â=42â=21â inch
By organizing fractional data onto a line plot, it becomes much easier to spot patterns, find totals, and compare measurements!