Mean, Median, and Skew: Correcting a Textbook Rule


Authors: 
von Hippel, P. T.
Editors: 
Stephenson, W. R.
Category: 
Volume: 
13(2)
Year: 
2005
Publisher: 
Journal of Statistics Education
URL: 
http://www.amstat.org/publications/jse/v13n2/vonhippel.html
Abstract: 

Many textbooks teach a rule of thumb stating that the mean is right of the median under right skew, and left of the median under left skew. This rule fails with surprising frequency. It can fail in multimodal distributions, or in distributions where one tail is long but the other is heavy. Most commonly, though, the rule fails in discrete distributions where the areas to the left and right of the median are not equal. Such distributions not only contradict the textbook relationship between mean, median, and skew, they also contradict the textbook interpretation of the median. We discuss ways to correct ideas about mean, median, and skew, while enhancing the desired intuition.

The CAUSE Research Group is supported in part by a member initiative grant from the American Statistical Association’s Section on Statistics and Data Science Education

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