Worksheet collection
Data and Graphing Worksheets by Chart Type
Use this collection when the lesson is about reading information, not just calculating. It gathers PrintableSpark's graphing and data pages by format so students can practice tables, tally charts, line plots, box plots, scatter plots, and summary statistics in a clear order.
Who this helps
Best for upper elementary students who need to read charts carefully, compare values, and explain what a data display shows. It also works for review before state testing because the formats are easy to rotate.
Start here
Read simple displays first
Begin with bar graphs, picture graphs, tally charts, and tables so students practice labels, totals, and comparisons.
Move to plotted data
Line plots, stem-and-leaf plots, and box plots ask students to organize values before they answer questions.
Finish with interpretation
Scatter plots and statistics pages are strongest after students can describe the data in words, not only mark an answer.
Printable worksheet links
Graphing Worksheets
Bar graphs, picture graphs, tally charts, and line plots give the broadest starting point for data display practice.
Data Table Worksheets
Survey tables, frequency tables, two-way tables, and missing values build careful reading before graphing gets harder.
Line Plot Worksheets
X-mark line plots help students connect individual measurements with a visual count of repeated values.
Stem and Leaf Plot Worksheets
Stem-and-leaf plots are useful when students need to keep exact numbers while still seeing a distribution.
Box and Whisker Plot Worksheets
Box plots introduce medians, quartiles, IQR, and spread without making students list every value each time.
Scatter Plot Worksheets
Scatter plots ask students to spot associations, draw trend lines, and make predictions from paired data.
Mean Median Mode Worksheets
Summary-statistic practice helps students describe a data set before they compare it with another one.
Printing plan
Start with graphing or data tables for direct reading practice, then move to line plots or summary statistics. Use box plots and scatter plots after students can already talk through the axis labels and data values.