2.1 WELCOME TO COMMON CORE HIGH SCHOOL MATHEMATICS LEADERSHIP SUMMER INSTITUTE 2014 SESSION 2 • 17 JUNE 2014 COMPARING DISTRIBUTIONS AND BEGINNING WITH STATISTICAL QUESTIONS.

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Transcript 2.1 WELCOME TO COMMON CORE HIGH SCHOOL MATHEMATICS LEADERSHIP SUMMER INSTITUTE 2014 SESSION 2 • 17 JUNE 2014 COMPARING DISTRIBUTIONS AND BEGINNING WITH STATISTICAL QUESTIONS.

2.1
WELCOME TO COMMON CORE HIGH SCHOOL
MATHEMATICS LEADERSHIP
SUMMER INSTITUTE 2014
SESSION 2 • 17 JUNE 2014
COMPARING DISTRIBUTIONS AND BEGINNING
WITH STATISTICAL QUESTIONS
2.2
TODAY’S AGENDA
 Homework review and discussion
 Grade 9, Lesson 8: Comparing Distributions
 Reflecting on CCSSM standards aligned to lesson 8
 Break
 Grade 6, Lesson 1: Posing Statistical Questions
 Reflecting on CCSSM standards aligned to lesson 1
 Group presentation planning time
 Homework and closing remarks
2.3
ACTIVITY 1
HOMEWORK REVIEW AND DISCUSSION
Table discussion
Discuss your write ups for the Day 1 homework tasks:
 Compare your strategies with others at your table
 Reflect on how you might revise your own solution and/or presentation
2.4
LEARNING INTENTIONS AND SUCCESS CRITERIA
We are learning to…
• Describe how two distributions compare using center, variability,
and shape.
• Interpret the center of a data population distribution as the typical
value of that distribution.
• Interpret the interquartile range (IQR) as description of variability,
specifically for data distributions that are skewed.
2.5
LEARNING INTENTIONS AND SUCCESS CRITERIA
We will be successful when we can:
• identify a nearly symmetrical distribution or a skewed distribution
using the mean and the median.
• identify how two data distributions are similar or different by
describing their shapes, comparing their centers (means and
medians), and describing their variability in general terms.
• pose statistical questions that involve collecting and interpreting
data.
2.6
ACTIVITY 2
LESSON 8: COMPARING DISTRIBUTIONS
REVIEW OF DATA DISTRIBUTIONS AND REPRESENTATIONS
ENGAGENY/COMMON CORE GRADE 9, LESSON 8
2.7
ACTIVITY 2
LESSON 8: COMPARING DISTRIBUTIONS
2.8
ACTIVITY 2
LESSON 8: COMPARING DISTRIBUTIONS
 What percent of people in Kenya are younger than 5? How do you find the
answer to this question?
 What does the first bar in the U.S. histogram mean?
 Describe the differences in the shape of the two histograms.
2.9
ACTIVITY 2
LESSON 8: COMPARING DISTRIBUTIONS
2.10
ACTIVITY 2
LESSON 8: COMPARING DISTRIBUTIONS
 What information is displayed in a box plot?
 What do you think the (*) represents in the box plot for Kenya?
 Does the box plot tell us the same or different information from the
histogram?
2.11
ACTIVITY 2
LESSON 8: COMPARING DISTRIBUTIONS
Reflecting on CCSSM standards aligned to lesson 8
Review the following CCSSM High School content standards:
S-ID.1
S-ID.2
S-ID.3
 Where did you see these standards in the lesson you have just completed?
 What would you look for in students’ work to suggest that they have made progress
towards these standards?
2.12
ACTIVITY 2
LESSON 8: COMPARING DISTRIBUTIONS
S-ID.1: Represent data with plots on the real number line (dot plots, histograms, and
box plots).
S-ID.2: Use statistics appropriate to the shape of the data distribution to compare
center (median, mean) and spread (interquartile range, standard deviation) of two or
more different data sets.
S-ID.3: Interpret differences in shape, center, and spread in the context of the data
sets, accounting for possible effects of extreme data points (outliners).
2.13
ACTIVITY 2
LESSON 8: COMPARING DISTRIBUTIONS
Reflecting on CCSSM standards aligned to lesson 8
Read MP6, the sixth CCSSM standard for mathematical practice.
 Recalling that the standards for mathematical practice describe student behaviors,
how did you engage in this practice as you completed the lesson?
 What instructional moves or decisions did you see occurring during the lesson that
encouraged greater engagement in MP6?
 Are there other standards for mathematical practice that were prominent as you and
your groups worked on the tasks?
2.14
ACTIVITY 2
LESSON 8: COMPARING DISTRIBUTIONS
CCSSM MP.6
MP.6 Attend to precision
Mathematically proficient students try to communicate precisely to
others. They try to use clear definitions in discussion with others and
in their own reasoning. They state the meaning of the symbols they
choose, including using the equal sign consistently and
appropriately. They are careful about specifying units of measure,
and labeling axes to clarify the correspondence with quantities in a
problem. They calculate accurately and efficiently, express numerical
answers with a degree of precision appropriate for the problem
context. In the elementary grades, students give carefully formulated
explanations to each other. By the time they reach high school they
have learned to examine claims and make explicit use of definitions.
engageny MP.6
MP.6 Attend to precision.
Students interpret and communicate
conclusions in context based on graphical and
numerical summaries. Students use statistical
terminology appropriately.
2.15
ACTIVITY 2
LESSON 8: COMPARING DISTRIBUTIONS
Closing questions for lesson 8
 What does a histogram show about the general shape of a data distribution?
 What does a box plot show about the general shape of a data distribution?
 What does a “typical” value indicate about the data distribution?
Break
2.17
ACTIVITY 3
LESSON 1: POSING STATISTICAL QUESTIONS
MEASURES THAT SUMMARIZE DATA DISTRIBUTION SHAPE
ENGAGENY/COMMON CORE GRADE 6, LESSON 1
2.18
ACTIVITY 3
LESSON 1: POSING STATISTICAL QUESTIONS
Statistics is about using data to answer questions. In this module, the following
four steps will summarize your work with data:
Step 1: Pose a question that can be answered by data.
Step 2: Determine a plan to collect the data.
Step 3: Summarize the data with graphs and numerical summaries.
Step 4: Answer the question (the statistical question) posed using the data and
the summaries.
2.19
ACTIVITY 3
LESSON 1: POSING STATISTICAL QUESTIONS
What is a statistical question?
 Identify what you think are the characteristics of a statistical question based on
your work with the previous lessons.
 What were possible statistical questions investigated in Lesson 2?
 What were possible statistical questions investigated in Lesson 8?
2.20
ACTIVITY 3
LESSON 1: POSING STATISTICAL QUESTIONS
A statistical question is a question that can be answered with data
and for which it is anticipated that the data (information) collected to
answer the question will vary.
2.21
ACTIVITY 3
LESSON 1: POSING STATISTICAL QUESTIONS
Could the following questions be answered by collecting data?
Would you consider them to be statistical questions?
 How tall is your 6th grade teacher?
 How tall is a typical 6th grade teacher?
 What is your hand span (in inches)?
 What is the hand span of 6th graders?
2.22
ACTIVITY 3
LESSON 1: POSING STATISTICAL QUESTIONS
Reflecting on CCSSM standards aligned to lesson 1
Read the following CCSSM Grade 6 content standards:
6.SP.A.1, 6.SP.A.2, 6.SP.B.4, 6.SP.B.5b
 Where did you see these standards in the lesson you have just completed?
 What would you look for in students’ work to suggest that they have made progress
towards these standards?
2.23
ACTIVITY 3
LESSON 1: POSING STATISTICAL QUESTIONS
6.SP.A.1: Recognize a statistical question as one that anticipates variability in the data related to the
question and takes account of it in the answers.
6.SP.A.2: Understand that a set of data collected to answer a statistical question has a distribution
which can be described by its center, spread, and overall shape.
6.SP.B.4: Display numerical data on plots on a number line, including dot plots, histograms, and box
plots.
6.SP.B.5b: Summarize numerical data sets in relation to their contexts by describing the nature of the
attribute under investigation, including how it was measured and its units of measurement.
2.24
ACTIVITY 3
LESSON 1: POSING STATISTICAL QUESTIONS
Reflecting on CCSSM standards aligned to lesson 1
Compare the Grade 6 standards with the High School standards you read earlier.
 What similarities and differences do you see between the standards at these two
grade levels?
 How can you ensure that the study of statistical distributions in High School builds
on, but is not a repeat of, that in the middle grades?
2.25
ACTIVITY 3
LESSON 1: POSING STATISTICAL QUESTIONS
Reflecting on CCSSM standards aligned to lesson 1
Read MP1, the first CCSSM standard for mathematical practice.
 Recalling that the standards for mathematical practice describe student behaviors,
how did you engage in this practice as you completed the lesson?
 What instructional moves or decisions did you see occurring during the lesson that
encouraged greater engagement in MP1?
 Are there other standards for mathematical practice that were prominent as you and
your groups worked on the tasks?
2.26
ACTIVITY 3
LESSON 1: POSING STATISTICAL QUESTIONS
CCSSM MP.1
MP.1 Make sense of problems and persevere in solving them.
Mathematically proficient students start by explaining to themselves the meaning of a
problem and looking for entry points to its solution. They analyze givens, constraints,
relationships, and goals. They make conjectures about the form and meaning of the solution
and plan a solution pathway rather than simply jumping into a solution attempt. They
consider analogous problems, and try special cases and simpler forms of the original
problem in order to gain insight into its solution. They monitor and evaluate their progress
and change course if necessary. Older students might, depending on the context of the
problem, transform algebraic expressions or change the viewing window on their graphing
calculator to get the information they need. Mathematically proficient students can explain
correspondences between equations, verbal descriptions, tables, and graphs or draw
diagrams of important features and relationships, graph data, and search for regularity or
trends. Younger students might rely on using concrete objects or pictures to help
conceptualize and solve a problem. Mathematically proficient students check their answers
to problems using a different method, and they continually ask themselves, “Does this make
sense?” They can understand the approaches of others to solving complex problems and
identify correspondences between different approaches.
engageny MP.1
MP.1 Make sense of problems and
persevere in solving them.
Students make sense of problems by defining
them in terms of a statistical question and then
determining what data might be collected in
order to provide an answer to the question and
therefore a solution to the problem.
2.27
ACTIVITY 3
LESSON 1: POSING STATISTICAL QUESTIONS
Closing questions for lesson 1
 What makes a question a statistical question?
 How is a statistical question answered?
 Consider the question: “What do participants want to eat during this class?”
 Is this a statistical question? Why or why not?
 If data is collected, how would you describe the data?
 How would we answer the question?
2.28
LEARNING INTENTIONS AND SUCCESS CRITERIA
We are learning to…
• Describe how two distributions compare using center, variability,
and shape.
• Interpret the center of a data population distribution as the typical
value of that distribution.
• Interpret the interquartile range (IQR) as description of variability,
specifically for data distributions that are skewed.
2.29
LEARNING INTENTIONS AND SUCCESS CRITERIA
We will be successful when we can:
• identify a nearly symmetrical distribution or a skewed distribution
using the mean and the median.
• identify how two data distributions are similar or different by
describing their shapes, comparing their centers (means and
medians), and describing their variability in general terms.
• pose statistical questions that involve collecting and interpreting
data.
2.30
ACTIVITY 4
GROUP PRESENTATION PLANNING TIME
 During Week 2 of the institute, you will present (in groups of no more than
three) one of the following Engage NY lessons:
 Grade 6, Lessons 2, 3, 4, 5, 16
 Grade 8, Lesson 6
 Grade 9 (Algebra 1), Lessons, 3, 17
 For the rest of our time today, you should study these lessons, decide which
one you wish to present, and find a group with which you will present.
2.31
ACTIVITY 5
HOMEWORK AND CLOSING REMARKS
 Complete the problem set problems in Algebra I, Lesson 8 and Grade 6, Lesson 1
that are assigned in our discussion.
 Extending the mathematics:
The data distribution of ages from a sample from Kenya had a noticeable difference
in the median age and the mean age. Summarize what makes a data distribution
have a noticeable difference in the median and mean. Describe at least two other
data sets that you think will have a noticeably different mean and median. Explain
why you think they will have noticeable differences.
 Reflecting on teaching:
In middle and high school, work on statistics often focuses on calculating measures
of center and spread and creating data displays. In what ways might the
consideration of a statistical question support the development of students’
understandings of statistics?