Point Estimate in AP Stats a single number for a population.
A point estimate is a single number computed from a sample that estimates a population parameter. The AP Statistics exam uses point estimates as the foundation for confidence intervals and hypothesis tests.
Definition
A point estimate is a single value computed from a sample that serves as the “best guess” of a population parameter. The most common point estimate is the sample mean (x̄) estimating the population mean (μ).
Other point estimates: sample proportion (p̂) for population proportion (p); sample standard deviation (s) for population standard deviation (σ).
Role in AP inference
Confidence intervals and hypothesis tests start from a point estimate. The interval is point estimate ± margin of error. The hypothesis test compares the point estimate to a hypothesized parameter value.
A good point estimate is unbiased (the expected value equals the true parameter) and low-variance (different samples give similar values).
Frequently asked questions
Quick answers — written by humans, not a chatbot.
Why do we ever use confidence intervals if we have a point estimate?
A point estimate gives no sense of precision. A confidence interval communicates uncertainty around the estimate.
Is the sample mean always the best point estimate of the population mean?
For most distributions, yes — it’s unbiased and consistent. Outlier-heavy distributions might call for the median, but the AP exam uses the mean.