Skip to content
mathlab
0
0 XP
KJ
Lesson 5 ~25 min Unit 4 · Data & Probability +85 XP

Bar Charts and Pie Charts

Master the two most common categorical data displays. Learn when to use each, how to draw them correctly, and how to calculate exact pie chart sector angles.

Today’s hook: Every infographic, news article, and business report uses bar charts and pie charts. They look simple — but there are specific rules that make them accurate and honest. Break those rules and your chart actively misleads people. Let’s learn to do it right.
0/5QUESTS
Think First
warm-up

When would you use a pie chart instead of a bar chart? Can you think of an example where one works better than the other?

Record in your workbook.
1
The Big Idea
+5 XP

Bar charts and pie charts both display categorical data, but they do different jobs. Bar charts compare category sizes; pie charts show parts of a whole.

Data: Pets owned by 20 students — Dog 8, Cat 6, Fish 4, Other 2. The bar chart shows each frequency as a bar height. The pie chart shows each as a slice proportional to 360°.

Bar Chart 4 8 Dog Cat Fish Other Freq Pie Chart Dog Cat Fish Oth 144° 108° 72° 36° Sum = 360°
Same data → different visual emphasis
2
What You’ll Master
objectives

Know

  • The rules for drawing a correct bar chart (scale, gaps, labels, title)
  • The formula for pie chart sector angles: angle = (f ÷ n) × 360°
  • When to choose a bar chart vs a pie chart

Understand

  • Why bars in a bar chart must be equal width with gaps between them
  • Why pie chart angles must sum to exactly 360°
  • Why pie charts become unreadable with more than ~6 categories

Can Do

  • Draw a correctly labelled bar chart from a frequency table
  • Calculate all sector angles for a pie chart and verify the sum
  • Identify errors in a given chart
3
Words You Need
vocabulary
Bar chartA graph where each category is represented by a rectangular bar. Bar height = frequency. Bars must be equal width with gaps between them.
Pie chartA circle divided into sectors. Each sector’s angle is proportional to its frequency relative to the total.
SectorA “slice” of a pie chart. The angle at the centre represents that category’s proportion of the whole.
ScaleThe evenly-spaced numbering on a bar chart axis. Must start at 0 and be consistent.
Axis labelsText labelling what each axis represents (e.g. “Sport” and “Number of Students”).
TitleA descriptive heading for the chart (e.g. “Favourite Sports of Year 8 Students”).
4
Spot the Trap
heads-up

Wrong bar chart: Bars of different widths. A wider bar looks bigger even with the same height, creating a misleading impression.

Right: All bars must be equal width with equal gaps between them. Only height encodes the frequency.

Wrong pie chart: Sector angles that sum to 359° or 361°. Even 1° off means the chart doesn’t represent the data faithfully.

Right: Calculate all angles using the formula, then check: $\text{sum} = 360\degree$. If you’re 1° off due to rounding, adjust the largest sector.

5
Drawing Bar Charts Correctly
+5 XP

A bar chart has these required features:

  • Title — descriptive, tells us what the chart shows
  • Axis labels — what each axis measures, including units
  • Even scale — y-axis starts at 0, equal intervals (e.g. 0, 2, 4, 6, 8, 10)
  • Equal bar widths — all bars the same width
  • Gaps between bars — distinguishes bar chart (categorical) from histogram (continuous)
  • All bars drawn accurately — height corresponds exactly to frequency
Horizontal or Vertical
Vertical bars are most common. Horizontal bars suit long category names.
Double Bar Chart
Use a double (grouped) bar chart to compare two groups side by side. Include a legend.
6
Drawing Pie Charts
+5 XP

Each sector’s angle is calculated using:

$$\text{Sector angle} = \frac{f}{n} \times 360\degree$$

where $f$ = frequency of the category and $n$ = total number of data values.

Example: Pets: Dog 8, Cat 6, Fish 4, Other 2. Total $n = 20$.

PetFreqCalculationAngle
Dog8$\frac{8}{20} \times 360$144°
Cat6$\frac{6}{20} \times 360$108°
Fish4$\frac{4}{20} \times 360$72°
Other2$\frac{2}{20} \times 360$36°
Total20360° ✓
7
Choosing the Right Chart
+5 XP

The choice of chart depends on what you want to communicate:

Use a Bar Chart when…
Comparing frequencies across categories. Showing how values change over time (horizontal axis = time). There are many categories (>6). You want to show actual frequencies, not proportions.
Use a Pie Chart when…
Showing parts of a whole (each category is a share of 100%). There are at most 5–6 categories (too many → slices become tiny and unreadable). The audience needs to see proportions at a glance.

Never use a pie chart when: categories don’t add up to a whole (e.g. people can vote for multiple options), or when you need to compare exact values (bar chart is more precise).

Watch Me Solve It · Pie chart angle calculation
+15 XP per step
Q
PROBLEM
A survey of 120 students finds: Walk 30, Bus 48, Car 24, Cycle 12, Train 6. Calculate the pie chart angle for each category. Verify they sum to 360°.
  1. 1
    Confirm total $n$
    $30 + 48 + 24 + 12 + 6 = 120$ ✓
    Always verify the total before calculating angles.
  2. 2
    Apply: Angle = (f ÷ 120) × 360° for each category
    Walk: $\frac{30}{120} \times 360 = 90\degree$   Bus: $\frac{48}{120} \times 360 = 144\degree$   Car: $\frac{24}{120} \times 360 = 72\degree$   Cycle: $\frac{12}{120} \times 360 = 36\degree$   Train: $\frac{6}{120} \times 360 = 18\degree$
  3. 3
    Check: angles sum to 360°
    $90 + 144 + 72 + 36 + 18 = 360\degree$ ✓
    This confirms no arithmetic errors. Now draw the sectors using a protractor.
AnswerWalk 90°, Bus 144°, Car 72°, Cycle 36°, Train 18°. Sum = 360° ✓
D
Brain Trainer · Bar and Pie Charts
4 problems
  1. 1 In a survey of 40 students, 10 prefer Drama. What is the pie chart angle for Drama?

    $\frac{10}{40} \times 360 = \frac{1}{4} \times 360 = 90\degree$90°
  2. 2 A pie chart sector is 72°. The total sample was 150. How many people does that sector represent?

    Proportion = 72 ÷ 360 = 0.2. Number = 0.2 × 150 = 30.30 people
  3. 3 Name THREE features that must appear on a correctly drawn bar chart.

    Any three from: descriptive title; labelled axes (with units); even scale starting at 0; equal bar widths; gaps between bars; bars drawn to correct height.Title, axis labels, even scale
  4. 4 A researcher wants to show what share of the national energy supply comes from solar, coal, gas, and hydro. Should they use a bar chart or pie chart? Why?

    Pie chart is more appropriate here because the researcher is showing parts of a whole (the 4 sources together make 100% of supply). The pie chart emphasises proportions clearly with only 4 categories, which is within the readable limit.Pie chart: parts of a whole, 4 categories
9
Common Pitfalls
heads-up
Y-axis not starting at zero
A bar chart with a y-axis starting at 50 makes small differences look huge. This is a common misleading technique in media.
Fix: Always start the y-axis at 0 unless you have a very good reason and clearly label the truncation.
Rounding errors in pie charts
If you round each angle to the nearest degree, you may end up with 358° or 362° total instead of 360°.
Fix: Calculate all angles, check the sum, and adjust the largest sector by the rounding error (e.g. add 1° to the largest sector if total = 359°).
Using a pie chart for too many categories
A pie chart with 10 categories creates tiny slices that are impossible to compare visually.
Fix: Limit pie charts to 5–6 categories maximum. Combine small categories into “Other”.
Copy This Into Your Book

Bar Chart Rules

  • Title, axis labels with units
  • Even scale starting at 0
  • Equal bar widths, equal gaps
  • Height = frequency

Pie Chart Formula

  • Angle $= \dfrac{f}{n} \times 360\degree$
  • Check: all angles sum to 360°
  • Max ~6 categories for readability

Reverse: angle to count

  • Proportion $= \dfrac{\text{angle}}{360}$
  • Count $= \text{proportion} \times n$

Choosing the Chart

  • Bar chart: comparing categories, many categories, change over time
  • Pie chart: parts of a whole, few categories (max 6)
1
In a survey of 60 people, 15 chose “chocolate”. What is the pie chart angle for chocolate?
+10 XP
2
Which of the following is a correct feature of a properly drawn bar chart?
+10 XP
3
100 students were surveyed. 25 walk to school. What is the angle for “Walk” in a pie chart?
+10 XP
4
A school survey records the favourite subjects of 200 students across 10 different subjects. Which chart type is most appropriate?
+10 XP
5
A bar chart shows Category A with bar height 5 and Category B with bar height 4, but the y-axis starts at 3. What is wrong?
+10 XP
Show Your Working
9 marks total
Apply Medium 3 MARKS

Q6. A class survey found: Red 5, Blue 8, Green 4, Yellow 3. Total = 20. Calculate the pie chart angle for each colour. Show your working and verify angles sum to 360°.

Answer in your workbook.
Calculate Medium 3 MARKS

Q7. A bar chart shows 4 bars: Apples 12, Bananas 8, Grapes 15, Oranges 5. (a) What is the total frequency? (b) What is the relative frequency of Grapes? (c) Which is the modal category?

Answer in your workbook.
Apply Medium 3 MARKS

Q8. A pie chart sector has an angle of 72°. The total sample size was 150. (a) What fraction of the sample does this sector represent? (b) How many people are in this category? (c) What percentage does this sector represent?

Answer in your workbook.
Comprehensive Answers

Quick Check

1. B — $(15 \div 60) \times 360 = 90\degree$.

2. C — Equal widths with gaps between bars.

3. A — $(25 \div 100) \times 360 = 90\degree$.

4. D — Bar chart for 10 categories; pie chart becomes unreadable.

5. B — Y-axis starting at 3 makes differences appear much larger than they are.

Model Answers

Q6 (3 marks): Red: $(5 \div 20) \times 360 = 90\degree$   Blue: $(8 \div 20) \times 360 = 144\degree$   Green: $(4 \div 20) \times 360 = 72\degree$   Yellow: $(3 \div 20) \times 360 = 54\degree$ [1 mark each for correct calculation]. Check: $90 + 144 + 72 + 54 = 360\degree$ ✓ [included in Q6 marking].

Q7 (3 marks): (a) Total = $12 + 8 + 15 + 5 = 40$ [1]. (b) Relative frequency of Grapes = $15 \div 40 = 0.375 = 37.5\%$ [1]. (c) Modal category: Grapes (highest frequency = 15) [1].

Q8 (3 marks): (a) Fraction $= 72 \div 360 = \tfrac{1}{5} = 0.2$ [1]. (b) Count $= 0.2 \times 150 = 30$ people [1]. (c) Percentage $= 0.2 \times 100 = 20\%$ [1].

Stretch Challenge · +25 XP, +10 coins

The School Travel Pie Chart

A survey of 120 students finds: Walk 30, Bus 48, Car 24, Cycle 12, Train 6. (a) Calculate all five pie chart angles and draw the pie chart in your workbook. (b) Which two categories together make up exactly 50% of the data? Show your working.

Reveal solution

Angles: Walk: $(30 \div 120) \times 360 = 90\degree$   Bus: $(48 \div 120) \times 360 = 144\degree$   Car: $(24 \div 120) \times 360 = 72\degree$   Cycle: $(12 \div 120) \times 360 = 36\degree$   Train: $(6 \div 120) \times 360 = 18\degree$. Check: $90 + 144 + 72 + 36 + 18 = 360\degree$ ✓.
(b) 50% of 120 = 60 students. Walk (30) + Car (24) = 54 — no. Walk (30) + Cycle (12) = 42 — no. Bus (48) + Cycle (12) = 60 — Yes! Bus and Cycle together = exactly 60 students = 50%.

R
Quick Review

Bar chart

Equal widths, gaps between bars, y-axis from 0

Pie chart angle

$(f \div n) \times 360\degree$ — check sum = 360

Reverse calculation

Count = (angle ÷ 360) × n

When to use bar chart

Many categories, comparing frequencies, change over time

When to use pie chart

Parts of a whole, max 5–6 categories

Common error

Y-axis not starting at 0 → misleading chart

Badges This Lesson

0 of 6
Bar Builder
Chart Champion
Pie Pioneer
Angle Ace
Graph Guru
Visual Victor

Mark lesson as complete

Tick when you’ve finished Learn, Practice, and the Stretch. Earns +85 XP and +25 coins.