3 scores max per player; No foul language, show respect for other players, etc.
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Game: PONG
Aim: Break the bricks, score points
Method:
Use your mouse or tap in the white bar to move the paddle horizontally to bounce the ball up the screen. Answer questions when you break the white bricks, score big points with the yellow bricks.
Your final score is based on correct answers, bricks broken and time taken.
7th grade / Statistics / Continuous data / Continuous grouped data / Grouped frequency table: midpoint
Continuous data can be represented in a "Grouped frequency table" where each class (group) covers the data points within a certain range, and the classes together cover the entire range of the data.
Grouped frequency tables are useful when there are so many raw data points that discrete values would become impossible. A limitation of continuous data is that individual data points are lost so that calculations of the mean, mode or range of the original discrete data points becomes impossible. Instead techniques have been developed to approximate these values for continuous data.
The mean of grouped continuous data can be approximated by finding the midpoint for each class multiplied by the frequency of that class and adding those values then dividing by the total frequency count of all the classes.
The midpoint is calculated by adding the highest number in a range to the lowest number and dividing by 2. So if a grouped frequency table has the classes: 1-10, 11-20, 21-30, and you are asked for the midpoint of the range 21-30, the calculation is 21 + 30 / 2 which is 25.5.
In this topic you are asked to find the midpoint for a specified class in a series of grouped frequency tables. There are 8 question/answer pairs in the lessons, and an additional 8 question/answer pairs in all the games and tests.
With our Pong math game you will be practicing the topic "Grouped frequency table: midpoint" from 7th grade / Statistics / Continuous data / Continuous data. The math in this game consists of 16 questions that ask you to identify the correct midpoint for the specified range in each grouped frequency table.
In our version of Pong/Breakout, there are 3 types of bricks for you to break: green bricks are worth just 2 points; yellow bricks are worth a whopping 50 points; breaking white bricks, which are worth 10 points, wins you a math question from the topic you have chosen.
You start with 5 lives. If the ball goes below the paddle, you lose a life and 200 points. The game ends when you answer all 10 questions or lose all your lives.
UXO * Duck shoot * The frog flies * Pong * Cat and mouse * The beetle and the bee
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