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Data Collection and Representation

Foundation Mathematics
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Data Collection and Representation

Foundation Mathematics
01 May 2026

Data Collection and Representation

Overview

Data is information collected about people, objects or events. In Foundation Mathematics, students learn how data is gathered, organised and displayed — skills used in health, science, business, and everyday decision-making.

KEY TAKEAWAY: Good data starts with good collection. The method used to collect data affects the reliability of any conclusions drawn from it.

What is Data?

  • Data refers to facts or values collected for analysis
  • A dataset is a collection of data values
  • Data can describe anything measurable or categorisable: heights, opinions, sales figures, temperatures

Types of Data

Categorical Data

Data that falls into named groups or categories — not measured on a numerical scale.
- Nominal: No natural order — colour, brand, favourite sport
- Ordinal: Has a natural order — ratings (poor/fair/good/excellent), year levels

Numerical Data

Data expressed as numbers that can be measured or counted.
- Discrete: Counted in whole numbers — number of cars, students in a class
- Continuous: Can take any value in a range — height, temperature, time

Data Type Example Display
Categorical Favourite subject Bar/pie chart
Numerical discrete Goals scored Column graph
Numerical continuous Daily rainfall Line graph

EXAM TIP: Identifying data type determines which graph is appropriate. Continuous data → line graphs. Categorical data → bar or pie charts.

Data Collection Methods

Surveys

  • Ask people questions to collect their responses
  • Can be face-to-face, written, or online
  • Important: Questions should be clear, unbiased, and cover the range of possible answers

Observation

  • Watch and record what happens — often used for counting (traffic, behaviour)
  • No interaction with the subject

Measurement

  • Use instruments to collect numerical data — ruler, scales, thermometer
  • Common in science, construction, health

Secondary Data

  • Data already collected by someone else (e.g. ABS statistics, weather records)
  • Useful but check currency and reliability

Recording Data

Tally charts are used to count and record during data collection:

Category Tally Frequency
Bus |||| || 7
Car |||| |||| 9
Walk ||| 3
Train || 2

Frequency tables summarise the tally data and can include relative frequency (as a fraction or percentage).

Displaying Data

Graph Type Best Used For
Column/bar graph Comparing categories
Pie chart Showing parts of a whole
Line graph Changes over time
Histogram Numerical data in intervals
Dot plot Small datasets, spread

COMMON MISTAKE: Using a line graph for categorical data (e.g. favourite colours). Line graphs imply continuity — use a bar graph for separate categories instead.

Constructing a Graph — Key Requirements

  1. Title — clearly describes what the data shows
  2. Axis labels — both axes labelled with variable name and units
  3. Scale — consistent and appropriate for the data range
  4. Accurate plotting — bars or points drawn to the correct values

VCAA FOCUS: VCAA tasks often ask you to construct and interpret graphs. Marks are awarded for correct labelling, scale, and accurate representation of data values.

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