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Basic Statistics

Compute the mean, median, mode and range of a small data set.

ACT Math Pre-Algebra 6 worked questions

Concept notes

Basic Statistics is one of the foundational skills tested in the Pre-Algebra section of ACT Math. Compute the mean, median, mode and range of a small data set. This page walks you through the core idea, common variations you can expect to see on test day, and pitfalls that drop the average student a band.

On ACT Math, questions in Pre-Algebra tend to reward students who can move quickly between symbolic and verbal forms of the same idea. Examiners often disguise Basic Statistics inside word problems, multi-step algebra, or geometry diagrams, so practising it in isolation here will pay off when it appears as a sub-step inside a harder problem.

How to think about it

Start every Basic Statistics problem by identifying what the question is actually asking for. Re-state it in your own words before you write a single equation. Then translate the situation into the cleanest mathematical form available — usually one equation, one inequality, or one diagram. Solve, then sanity-check by substituting your answer back into the original setup. The College Board and ACT both reward students who avoid careless slips far more than they reward speed.

If the problem feels long, don't panic. Almost every Pre-Algebra question can be reduced to a one- or two-step manipulation once you see the structure. The fastest students aren't the ones who compute fastest; they're the ones who recognise the structure fastest.

Common mistakes to avoid

  • Skipping the read. Most wrong answers on Basic Statistics questions come from misreading a word like 'at most', 'exactly' or 'inclusive'. Underline the constraint before you start.
  • Mismatching units. If the problem gives you minutes and asks for hours, convert before you set up the equation, not at the end.
  • Forgetting the −1 multiplier. Distributing a negative across parentheses is the single most common algebra slip on the SAT and ACT.
  • Not checking endpoints. Inequalities and absolute-value problems frequently have one valid endpoint and one extraneous one. Always test.

Test-day tips

For ACT Math, allow yourself roughly 1 minute 15 seconds per question on average. If a Basic Statistics question is taking longer than two minutes, mark it, take your best guess, and come back. There is no penalty for guessing on either test, so never leave a bubble blank.

Students who score in the top 10% on Pre-Algebra almost always do the same three things: they write neat work in the booklet, they read every answer choice before selecting one, and they verify with a quick estimate. Build those habits in the practice questions below.

The six practice problems on this page mirror the difficulty mix you can expect from a real ACT Math section: two easier warm-ups, two medium calibration questions, and two harder problems that combine Basic Statistics with another idea from Pre-Algebra. Work each one with paper and pen before opening the worked solution.

Tip: Skim the notes once, attempt the questions below with paper and pen, then open the worked solutions. Reading solutions before attempting feels productive but builds almost no recall.

Worked example problems

Six questions calibrated to the difficulty mix of the real test — two easy, two medium, two hard. Each comes with a fully worked step-by-step solution.

Question 1 of 6 Easy

A recipe uses 2 cups of flour for every 8 cups of sugar. If you use 12 cups of flour, how many cups of sugar are needed?

  1. A. 48
  2. B. 10
  3. C. 49
  4. D. 20
Show worked solution

Set up a proportion: 2/8 = 12/x.

Cross-multiply: 2x = 96, so x = 48.

48 cups of sugar are needed.

Answer: A  ·  48

Question 2 of 6 Easy

A jacket originally costs $45 and is on sale for 25% off. What is the sale price?

  1. A. $56.25
  2. B. $33.75
  3. C. $11.25
  4. D. $20
Show worked solution

25% off means the customer pays 75% of the original.

Sale price = 45 × 0.75 = 33.75.

Answer: B  ·  $33.75

Question 3 of 6 Medium

What is the mean of the data set: 69, 55, 61, 74, 57?

  1. A. 55
  2. B. 63.2
  3. C. 316
  4. D. 64.2
Show worked solution

Add: 69 + 55 + 61 + 74 + 57 = 316.

Divide by the count 5: 316 / 5 = 63.2.

Answer: B  ·  63.2

Question 4 of 6 Medium

The ratio of boys to girls in a club is 6:4. If the club has 60 members, how many are girls?

  1. A. 36
  2. B. 24
  3. C. 35
  4. D. 27
Show worked solution

There are 6 + 4 = 10 parts; each part = 60/10 = 6.

Girls = 4 × 6 = 24.

Answer: B  ·  24

Question 5 of 6 Hard

Simplify: 3^2 · 3^2.

  1. A. 6^4
  2. B. 3^10
  3. C. 3^4
  4. D. 3^4
Show worked solution

Use x^a · x^b = x^{a+b}.

3^2 · 3^2 = 3^{4}.

Answer: C  ·  3^4

Question 6 of 6 Hard

Maya opens a savings account with $21 and adds $11 each week. After how many weeks will her balance be $87?

  1. A. 7
  2. B. 8
  3. C. 5
  4. D. 6
Show worked solution

Model: B(w) = 21 + 11w.

Set 21 + 11w = 87 → 11w = 66 → w = 6.

Answer: D  ·  6

Where this topic appears on the test

Topics like Basic Statistics appear on most recent ACT Math sittings, sometimes as a standalone question and sometimes as a sub-step inside a longer problem. Browse the past paper index to see where it has appeared recently and re-attempt the question with the worked solution open.

For the formulas you'll need on test day, see our Pre-Algebra formula sheet. To plan a study path that targets your current score, jump to the score-band guides.