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Mathematics 8 Online
OpenStudy (anonymous):

Which of the following is an appropriate measure of central tendency to apply to the following list of 11th-grade students' heights? Check all that apply. 4' 9", 5' 3", 5' 4", 5' 7'', 5' 3", 5' 9", 6' 0", 5' 4", 6' 0", 6' 1", 5' 7", 5' 5", 4' 5" A. Mean B. Median C. Standard deviation D. Mode E. Range

OpenStudy (anonymous):

Mode, medium and mean . the other two are not measures of central tendency

OpenStudy (anonymous):

hehe thanks

OpenStudy (anonymous):

im gunna call u fish:D

OpenStudy (anonymous):

haha alright

OpenStudy (anonymous):

lol:D

OpenStudy (lasttccasey):

Actually Mode has nothing to do with central tendencies.

OpenStudy (anonymous):

it doesn't

OpenStudy (anonymous):

soo was that wrong?

OpenStudy (anonymous):

mode is part of the central tendency tho

OpenStudy (lasttccasey):

Well, how is it part of the central tendency then?

OpenStudy (anonymous):

OpenStudy (anonymous):

see

OpenStudy (lasttccasey):

I see, this question is based on algebra, I thought it was a statistics question. That was my mistake. Either way the mode can be a very misleading value if your data doesn't fit a near perfect bell curve.

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