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Learn to read bar graphs, circle graphs, and pictographs to find fractions, totals, and missing numbers.
People have been drawing pictures to show numbers for a very long time! Long before computers or even pencils, people needed ways to organize information so it was easy to understand. That's exactly what graphs do — they turn boring numbers into pictures that tell a story.
Imagine you want to know which flavor of ice cream is most popular in your class. You could write a long list of names and flavors. Or you could draw a colorful graph that shows the answer right away!
On the ISEE, you'll see graphs and need to figure out fractions (what part of the whole?) or totals (how many altogether?). Let's learn how!
Before we jump into practice, let's make sure you know the big ideas. These four principles will help you with every graph question on the ISEE.
A bar graph uses tall or short bars to show numbers. The taller the bar, the bigger the number. Let's look at a bar graph that shows how many books four students read during the summer.
Look at the graph above. Can you see that Mia's bar reaches the 20 line? That means Mia read 20 books. Now, what if a question asks: "What fraction of all the books did Mia read?" First, find the total: 20 + 15 + 10 + 5 = 50. Then Mia's fraction is 20 out of 50, which simplifies to 2 out of 5. That's almost half!
Most ISEE graph questions boil down to two kinds of math: finding a total and finding a fraction. Here's how each one works.
The ISEE uses three main types of graphs. Each one shows data in a different way. Let's look at a circle graph, since we already explored a bar graph.
| Graph Type | What It Looks Like | Best For |
|---|---|---|
| Bar Graph | Bars going up or sideways | Comparing amounts side by side |
| Circle Graph (Pie Chart) | A circle cut into slices | Showing parts of a whole |
| Pictograph | Rows of small pictures or symbols | Fun way to show data with a key (e.g., each picture = 5) |
On a pictograph, always check the key! If each picture of a star stands for 2 votes and you see 4 stars, that means 4 × 2 = 8 votes, not 4. Half a picture means half the key value.
Let's walk through a real ISEE-style question together. Use the bar graph from Section 3 (Books Read During Summer).
Question: According to the graph, what fraction of the total books were read by James?
Knowing the math is important, but smart strategies can save you time and help you avoid tricky mistakes. Here's what works best for graph questions.
| Strategy | When to Use It | Why It Helps |
|---|---|---|
| Estimate first | When bars fall between grid lines | Gets you close to the answer fast, helps you eliminate wrong choices |
| Use benchmark fractions | Circle graph questions about fractions | Half the circle = 1/2, quarter = 1/4. Compare slices to these benchmarks. |
| Eliminate and guess | When you're not sure | No penalty for wrong answers! Cross out choices that are way too big or small. |
| Check the key | Pictographs | One picture might mean 2, 5, or 10. Missing the key is the #1 mistake! |
The graph skills you're learning now will grow with you! As you move into middle school and beyond, graphs get more detailed. Here's a sneak peek at how these ideas connect to bigger math topics.
| What You Learn Now | What Comes Next |
|---|---|
| Reading bar heights to find values | Reading line graphs and scatter plots in middle school |
| Estimating values between grid lines | Interpolation and estimating slopes |
| Finding fractions from circle graphs | Percentages, ratios, and proportions |
| Adding values to find totals | Finding averages (mean) from data sets |
Everything you practice now builds a strong foundation. The better you get at reading graphs, the easier data questions will be for years to come. You've got this!
Time to test your skills! These five questions go from easier to harder. Remember: read the question carefully, look at the graph information, and always simplify fractions. Good luck — you've got this!
On the ISEE, you'll use bar graphs, circle graphs, and pictographs to answer questions. Always start by reading the title and labels first. Check the scale on bar graphs and the key on pictographs.
To find a total, add all the values. To find a fraction, put the part on top and the total on the bottom, then simplify. Use estimation when bars fall between grid lines. And remember — on the ISEE, always answer every question because there's no penalty for guessing!