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PONG
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Instructions graphic for math game pong
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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.

Mean mode median range
      
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PONG game to practice
'Mean mode median range' for 7th grade

Frequency tables: mean, mode, median, range

Frequency tables are a way of laying out data to show the number of items there are in different categories. From frequency tables you can see what are the most and least frequent categories, and easily calculate mean, mode and range for a data set. They are also used as a source to generate more graphical representations such as bar charts, pie charts, etc.

Frequency tables make it easy to find the mode, median and range for a data set. The mean takes a little more work.

The mode is the most frequent value in a data set. To find the mode from a frequency table, find the item or category with the highest frequency.

The median is the middle value in an ordered data set. To find the position of the median value in a frequency table, add up all the frequencies in all the categories, add one more and then divide by two. This will identify the position of the median value of the data set. If the result is a decimal, the position of the median value is halfway between two frequencies.

The range is the spread of values in a data set. To find the range of data from a frequency table, take away the smallest value from the largest value.

The mean is the average value of a data set. To find the mean from a frequency table, do the following. Multiply each category by its frequency. Add these values to get the total value from all the categories. Add all the frequencies together to get the total frequencies. Now divide the total value by the total frequencies to get the mean.

In this topic you are asked to derive the mean, mode, median or range for a series of frequency tables.

There are 8 question/answer pairs in the lessons for this topic, and an additional 8 question/answer pairs in all the games and tests.

With our Pong math game you will be practicing the topic "Mean mode median range" from 7th grade / Statistics / Discrete data / Discrete data. The math in this game consists of 16 questions that ask you to calculate the mean, mode, median or range for the given frequency tables to 2 d.p..

This is our version of the classic early computer game "Breakout" (itself a development of the even earlier "Pong" game - we prefer that name) where a player controls a bar that knocks a ball or puck around the screen.

Large thumbnail for math game Pong

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.

Notes

  1. This version of Pong is a one player game to learn or revise math
  2. Our PONG for math is a scoring game - play a few times and set a personal best score!
  3. Addictive! You may end up trying to avoid the white bricks so that you can play for longer...
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How to play PONG to practice
'Mean mode median range' for 7th grade

Free Math Games screenshot of Pong game for secondary

  1. Select the PONG game from the games selection page.
  2. On the settings page there are brief instructions on how to play.
  3. Click on PLAY to enter the game screen.
  4. The clock starts when the bell rings.
  5. Move your mouse (or finger tap or drag in the white bar for touch screens) to move your paddle left and right.
  6. Knock the ball back up the screen to break the bricks.
  7. You start with 1000 points and 5 lives.
  8. You lose 1 point every 2 seconds.
  9. 200 points are deducted from your score for each life lost
  10. Green bricks score 2 point, yellow bricks score 50 points, white bricks score 10 points and open the question screen.
  11. For each question click/tap on the correct answer or enter it using the keyboard.
  12. Wrong answers lose you 25 points but correct answers win you 50 points.
  13. Continue breaking bricks and answering questions until you have cleared all the question bricks.
  14. The game also ends if you lose all 5 of your lives.
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