Line graphs and data displays — Year 5

Line graphs and data displays — Year 5

Line graphs and data displays

You've already met bar charts, tally charts and pictograms in earlier years. In Year 5 we add three more useful displays:

  • Line graphs — for showing how something changes over time.
  • Line plots — for showing many measurements on one number line, often with fractions.
  • Double bar graphs — for comparing two related sets of bars side by side.

Each kind of display has its own job. Picking the right one for the data is a skill in itself.

Line graph

A line graph has two axes — usually time on the bottom (days, months, hours) and a quantity on the side (temperature, number of visitors, plant height). Each measurement is a single point, and the points are joined with straight lines. The line shows the trend: going up, going down, or staying level.

How to read a value

Pick the day on the bottom axis. Trace a finger straight up to the line. Then trace straight left to the number line on the side. That number is the value on that day.

  • Line going up = the quantity is growing.
  • Line going down = it is shrinking.
  • Line going flat = staying the same.
  • A sudden jump between two points means a big change between those two times.

When to use a line graph

Line graphs are best for data over time. Don't use them for unrelated categories — e.g. "favourite ice-cream flavours" doesn't have an order, so connecting the points with a line would suggest a fake trend.

Line plot

A line plot (also called a "dot plot") shows many measurements at once, stacked above a number line. Each × represents one measurement.

Line plots are common with fraction data. You measured the lengths of nine pencils to the nearest quarter-inch — every measurement gets one ×. Stacks of × marks show repeats (here, three pencils were 1/2 inch).

What questions can a line plot answer?

  • What's the most common value? (The tallest stack.)
  • What's the largest value? The smallest? (Look at the far right / far left.)
  • What's the range? (Largest − smallest. This is the question the line-plot exercise asks.)
  • How many measurements in total? (Count all the × marks.)

Double bar graph

A double bar graph shows two related sets of bars side by side. It is great when you want to compare the same thing in two situations — for example, number of boys vs number of girls in each of four classes.

The legend (key) tells you which colour belongs to which series.

Reading a double bar graph

  • For one bar: trace from the top of the bar to the y-axis to read its value.
  • To compare two bars in the same group: read both, then subtract.
  • To find the difference between two series in a group: compute |valueA − valueB|.

This is what the double bar graph exercise asks: pick the highlighted group, read both bars, subtract.

Picking the right display

You want to show…Best display
How something changes over timeLine graph
Many measurements (especially fractions)Line plot
Two related categories across groupsDouble bar graph
One category across groupsBar chart
Frequencies in a long listTally chart
Counts using picture symbolsPictograph

What's next