Frequency Trees

Curriculum support25 minsFREE

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Key takeaways
Fill in a frequency tree.
Draw a frequency tree from a given set of data.
Use a frequency tree to calculate probabilities.  
Shahriyar HajghassemHost: Shahriyar is a Maths Teacher at a School in Northwest London, teaching years 7 to 11. He graduated from the University of Warwick in 2013 and set off to China for two years teaching IGCSE and A-Level Economics.

Frequency trees are linked with two-way tables which are also another way of sorting data into different categories. By the end of this lesson, students should be able to create a frequency tree from a written description. Frequency trees should not be mistaken with tree diagrams. Frequency trees will usually appear in the foundation GCSE paper or at the start of a Higher paper, therefore this is a topic that is useful to both Higher and Foundation students.

More Maths Sessions: Relative FrequencySolving Linear Equations (High Difficulty)Functions

Safeguarding reminder:The safety of your child is of the utmost importance. All of our classes are pre-recorded to remove any concerns around live participation. For reruns of our past live classes, students' webcams and microphones were disabled and only the chat history, if participation was requested, is visible.

Suitable for:

This class is suitable for students in Years 8-11 or S2-S5 who are working at/towards an Intermediate KS3 or equivalent level. 

Class requirements:
You will need a laptop or device with internet connection to watch the class, as well as a pen and notepad for taking notes.
What to expect:
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