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Teaching statistical reasoning in elementary schools using age-appropriate methods

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Children love candy and have learned fractions ... Each child received a small package of candy ... Concepts: sampling variability, precision of larger samples ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Teaching statistical reasoning in elementary schools using age-appropriate methods


1
Teaching statistical reasoning in elementary
schools using age-appropriate methods
  • Shrikant I. Bangdiwala, Ph.D.
  • The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
  • Department of Biostatistics

2
Issue
  • In the USA, children in elementary school are
    taught arithmetic and mathematics, but not
    statistics
  • Teaching the concepts and principles of
    statistics is fundamental for developing an
    understanding of
  • Uncertainty
  • Variability
  • Probability
  • Risk

3
Rationale
  • Statistical concepts can be effectively imparted
    to elementary school children if done in an
    age-appropriate manner

4
Methods
  • In the USA, parents are allowed to actively
    participate in the instruction in public schools
  • I personally volunteered to teach math classes
    for my two children ? teachers were more than
    happy to have a guest instructor teach a class

5
Second grade ages 7 8
  • Children love games and have learned to count ?
  • Teach goodness-of-fit, composition bar graphs
  • Using an ancient game from India with oblong dice
    chaupar or soktabaji
  • Concepts fairness probability and expected
    outcomes ? variability, uncertainty

6
Chaupar / soktabaji
Played by the Emperor Akbar I of the 16th century
Mogul Empire Lead to the Western games of Ludo
and Pachisi
7
Chaupar
  • Rules
  • Each of four players moves his/her pieces
    (soktas) around the path of squares while
    avoiding being caught and forced to re-start
  • Advance is based on roll of 5 cowry shells or two
    oblong dice
  • Objective is to be the first to get all ones
    pieces safely home

8
Chaupar
  • Dice
  • Oblong dice had numbers 1, 3, 4, and 6
  • Dice of ivory unavailable today except as antiques

Possible outcomes 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12
Probability Distribution x16 1 0 2 2 1 4 1 2 2 0 1
9
Strategy
  • I made several dice out of hard acrylic, cut to
    the correct size and labeled discussed how do
    we know which dice are fair?
  • Children were enlisted to pick a die during math
    center and in teams, roll it 100 times
  • They counted off squares in a data form
    visually constructing a bar chart
  • I produced summary charts after all dice were
    thrown 1000 times (several weeks) and the class
    determined the dice that were fair

10
Fourth grade ages 9 10
  • Children love candy and have learned fractions ?
  • Teach sampling distribution of the mean,
    estimating proportions
  • Using colored MM plain candy bags
  • Concepts variability, sample size, estimating
    probabilities

11
M M candy
  • Candy sold in packages of various sizes
  • Marketing campaigns by the MM Mars Company have
    focused on the distribution of colors

12
Strategy
  • Focused on the fraction of candies in a bag
    that were RED
  • Children got a partner and were placed in tables
    of 4
  • Each child received a small package of candy
  • Children made bar charts with their data and
    calculated their fraction special forms
  • Estimates charted on the blackboard
  • Each team of two calculated a pooled-data
    fraction charted on same blackboard just below
    previous chart
  • Each table calculated a pooled-data fraction
    charted on same blackboard just below previous
    charts

13
Discussions
  • Variability in the number of MMs per same size
    bag very important to the children!
  • Do not tamper with your data until the end of
    the study Do not eat your data !
  • Variability of the estimated proportions
  • Central tendency of the estimated proportions
  • How larger sample sizes (double and quadruple)
    got less variability of the estimated
    proportions, but same central tendency
  • Bell-shaped distribution of the sample of
    estimated proportions is better for larger sample
    sizes

14
Sixth grade ages 11 12
  • Children fascinated by probability ?
  • Teach sampling techniques
  • Using sampling demonstrator of 10,000 colored
    balls of various colors, sampling palettes
  • Concepts sampling variability, precision of
    larger samples

15
Strategy
  • Basically similar to the MM exercise, but
    children are older and do not need candy bribe
  • Concept of sampling from a population to give
    equal chance of selection and not introduce
    selection biases
  • mixing of balls
  • palettes with holes for objectivity
  • Sampling palettes of sizes 10, 25, 50 and 100
    illustrate the reduced variability and increased
    accuracy in samples of larger sizes

16
  • And for the future

17
Eight grade ages 13 14
  • Childrens bodies are changing and they are able
    to cook ?
  • Teach experimental design in biology class or
    chemistry class
  • Having them conduct small experiments
  • growing small plants under different conditions,
    or
  • Cooking under different variations of ingredients
  • Concepts uncertainty in outcome, likelihood and
    relative risk

18
Tenth grade ages 15 16
  • Children noticing their bodies ?
  • Teach measurement error and summary measures
  • Having them create their own data by measuring
    their heights, weights, skinfolds, and other
    anthropometric values
  • Concepts variability, representativeness of the
    classroom

19
Twelfth grade ages 17 18
  • Children more interested in the World ?
  • Teach utility of statistics in daily life
  • Use examples from politics, media, Census,
    medical research
  • Concepts utility of statistics in everyday life,
    relative risk of their behaviors

20
Conclusions
  • Keep statistical literacy approaches to
    age-appropriate techniques
  • Make it fun !!!
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