this post was submitted on 15 May 2024
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It's absolutely not. Median is a value in the middle of a sorted set and average is, well, average. In the set of 1, 7, 10: 7 is median and 6 is average.
as @force pointed out, 'average' has many meanings (haha). of course a lot of the time, average is used as 'mean'. but...not always!
Idk man looking up a definition for "average" is like
and
and
doesn't look like that dude's using the word "wrong" to me, a lotta people and mathematicians definitely recall using "average" meaning median
I agree with this. In my stats class in college, we never conflated average and median. They meant two different things.
Such irony that this comment gets downvoted on a meme about failing education
Even with a simple, yet very clear example
What's ironic here is your comment, lol. "Average" can and is absolutely used to say mean or median or any other average that is representative based on the dataset in question. When you ask a statistician to calculate an average of a dataset they probably won't just go calculate the mean, they'll think about which value is most appropriate in context.