AQA GCSE Maths
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Lines of Best Fit
Line of Best Fit
What Is a Line of Best Fit?
When you draw a scatter graph and the points show a clear trend (either increasing or decreasing), you can draw a line of best fit.
It’s a straight line that:
- Follows the general pattern of the data
- Helps you estimate values (predict things!)
- Shows the strength and direction of the relationship
How Do I Draw a Line of Best Fit?
Step-by-step:
- Use a ruler and draw a single straight line.
- The line should go through the middle of the points — not necessarily through any of them.
- Try to balance the points — roughly the same number above and below the line.
- Ignore outliers (extreme points that don’t match the pattern).
- Extend the line across the full data range.
Tip: Slide your ruler up and down until the line feels “right” — this is often done by eye.
How Do I Use a Line of Best Fit?
Once drawn, the line can be used to:
- Estimate a value (called interpolation)
- e.g. “If x = 6, what’s the estimated y?”
- Predict a value outside the data range (called extrapolation)
Be careful — these estimates are less reliable.
Example
Olivia is researching mobile phone battery life and price. Her results:
Battery Life (hrs) | Price (£) |
---|---|
8 | 120 |
10 | 150 |
12 | 180 |
9 | 135 |
15 | 210 |
14 | 200 |
11 | 160 |
(a) Plot a scatter graph
- x-axis: Battery Life
- y-axis: Price
Plot the points as crosses. No lines joining them.
(b) Draw a line of best fit
- Place a ruler to follow the general trend
- Balance the number of points above and below
- Ignore any odd outliers
(c) Describe the type of correlation
The points rise from left to right
This is positive correlation:
As battery life increases, price increases.
(d) Estimate the price of a phone with 13 hours of battery life
- Use your line of best fit
- Go to x = 13, draw upwards to meet your line
- Read across to the y-axis
Estimate: About £190
Tuity Tip
Hover me!
Drawing by hand? Try placing your ruler so that the points are evenly spread on both sides of your line.
Interpolation (inside the data range) is safe — extrapolation (outside the data range) is guesswork
Don’t join the data points — scatter graphs are not line graphs.
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