Syllabus Edition
First teaching 2025
First exams 2027
Mathematical Skills (Cambridge (CIE) IGCSE Geography): Revision Note
Exam code: 0460 & 0976
Mathematical skills in geography
Some aspects of geography require a range of mathematical skills
These skills are used for:
Calculations
Analysing data
Percentages
Percentages are frequently used in geography
Percent simply means 'out of one hundred'
Percentages can be used in many ways, for example, literacy rates or the numbers of people in different age groups in a country
Percentages can be converted into fractions and back again
If 20% of the population cannot read or write, this is 1/5th of the population
If 28 of 180 homes in a village do not have internet access, this can be converted into a percentage
Divide by 4 to simplify 28/180 to 7/45
7 divided by 45 = 0.1555
Round to two decimal places 0.16
To turn into a percentage 0.16 x 100 = 16%
16% of homes do not have internet access
Rounding
In the example above the answer to 7 divided by 45 is 0.1555
In geography significant figures can be used to make the numbers easier to work with
In the example 0.15555 was rounded up to 0.16 to make the calculations easier
To round up:
Identify the digit in the required place value
Circle the number to the right of the required place value
If the circled number is 5 or more, then you round to the bigger number
If the circled number is less than 5, then you round to the smaller number
Put a zero in any following place values before the decimal point
Significant figures
To find the first significant figure when reading from left to right, find the biggest place value that has a non-zero digit
The first significant figure of 3097 is 3
The first significant figure of 0.0062070 is 6
The zeros before the 6 are not significant
The zero after the 2 but before the 7 is significant
The zero after the 7 is not significant
Count along to the right from the first significant figure to identify the position of the required significant figure
Do count zeros that are between other non-zero digits
E.g. 0 is the second significant figure of 3097
9 is the third significant figure of 3097
Use the normal rules for rounding
For large numbers, complete places up to the decimal point with zeros
E.g. 34 568 to 2 significant figures is 35 000
For decimals, complete places between the decimal point and the first significant figure with zeros
E.g. 0.003 435 to 3 significant figures is 0.003 44
Proportion
Direct proportion
As one quantity increases/decreases by a certain rate (factor)
The other quantity will increase/decrease by the same rate
The ratio of the two quantities is constant
A map has a scale of 1:25,000 this means that 1 unit on the map (e.g. 1 cm) represents 25,000 units (25,000 cm or 0.25km) in real life
An inverse proportion means that as one variable increases, the other decreases by a proportionate amount
As urban populations increase, rural populations decrease
Ratio
A ratio is a way of comparing one part of a whole to another
Ratios are used to compare one part to another part
What do ratios look like?
Ratios involve two or three different numbers separated using a colon
E.g. 2 : 5, 3 : 1, 4 : 2 : 3
Dependency ratios compare the number of dependants (individuals aged 0-14 and over 65) to the working age population (aged 15-64)
In the ratio 2:1, when referring to the dependency ratio this means that for every 2 working age people there is one dependent person
Magnitude
In geography the term magnitude has two meanings
In mathematical skills it is the relative size or scale of a quantity when comparing different geographical data
For example, if Country A has a population of 40 million and Country B has a population of 10 million, we can say that Country A's population is four times greater than Country B's
This means Country A's population is greater by a magnitude of 4.
Magnitude can also refer to the amount of energy released in an earthquake
Frequency
Frequency refers to how often a particular value or category appears within a set of data
In a traffic survey the number of times each type of vehicle (car, bus, bicycle) passes by is recorded
The count of each vehicle type represents its frequency.
To organise and interpret this data effectively, geographers use frequency tables
These tables list each category alongside its corresponding frequency, making it easier to identify patterns and trends
For example, a frequency table can help to identify the most common mode of transport used in a particular area
Mean, median, mode & range
Mean, median and mode
These are measures of central tendency
The mean is calculated by adding up all of the values in the data set and then dividing by the total number of values in the data set
The median is the middle value of a set of data. The numbers are arranged in rank order and then the middle value selected
The mode is the value which occurs most frequently in a set of data
Range
A measure of dispersion: the spread of data around the average
Range is the distance between the highest and lowest value
Interquartile range is the part of the range that covers the middle 50% of the data
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