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NotesMath AA HLTopic 4.3Quartiles & IQR
Back to Math AA HL Topics
4.3.31 min read

Quartiles & IQR

IB Mathematics: Analysis and Approaches • Unit 4

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Contents

  • Median & quartiles of a list
  • Range & interquartile range
  • From a frequency table or the GDC
Split the ordered data in half, then in half again: Order the data.

The median splits it in half.

The lower quartile Q₁ is the median of the lower half, and the upper quartile Q₃ is the median of the upper half.

[Diagram: math-box-plot] - Available in full study mode

IB-style question — quartiles of a list

Find the median, Q₁ and Q₃ of 12, 15, 15, 18, 20, 22, 27.

Step by step

  1. n = 7; median is the 4th value.
  2. Lower half 12, 15, 15 → Q₁; upper half 20, 22, 27 → Q₃.

Final answer

Median = 18, Q₁ = 15, Q₃ = 22.

Odd n: don't include the median in the halves: With an odd number of values, leave the median out of both halves before finding the quartiles.
Two measures of spread: The range = max − min uses the extremes.

The interquartile range IQR = Q₃ − Q₁ measures the spread of the middle 50% and ignores outliers.
Two spread measures — the IQR is more resistant to extreme values.

IB-style question — range and IQR

For the data 12, 15, 15, 18, 20, 22, 27 (Q₁ = 15, Q₃ = 22), find the range and the IQR.

Step by step

  1. Range = max − min.
  2. IQR = Q₃ − Q₁.

Final answer

Range = 15; IQR = 7.

IQR ignores outliers: Because the IQR uses only the quartiles, one extreme value barely changes it — unlike the range.

IB-style question — is it an outlier?

A data set has lower quartile Q1 = 12 and upper quartile Q3 = 20.

Show that the value 35 is an outlier.

Step by step

  1. Find the IQR, then the upper fence Q3 + 1.5 × IQR.
  2. Compare 35 with the fence.

Final answer

35 > 32 (the upper fence), so it is an outlier.

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Even n: average the two middle values: With an even number of values, the median is the mean of the two middle values, and each quartile is the median of its half.

On Paper 2, entering the list and running 1-Var Stats gives Q₁, the median and Q₃ directly.

IB-style question — even-sized list

Find the median, Q₁, Q₃ and IQR of 5, 8, 8, 10, 12, 15.

Step by step

  1. n = 6; median = mean of the 3rd and 4th values.
  2. Lower half 5, 8, 8 → Q₁ = 8; upper half 10, 12, 15 → Q₃ = 12.

Final answer

Median = 9, Q₁ = 8, Q₃ = 12, IQR = 4.

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A data set has minimum 4, Q₁ = 11, median 16, Q₃ = 23, maximum 35. Find the range and the interquartile range. [2 marks]

Related Math AA HL Topics

Continue learning with these related topics from the same unit:

4.1.1Populations & samples
4.1.2Sampling techniques
4.10.1Prediction
4.11.1Conditional probability
View all Math AA HL topics

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