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Guidelines for Assessment and Instruction in Statistics Education A Curriculum Framework for Pre-K-12 Statistics Education The GAISE Report (2007) The American Statistical Association http://www.amstat.org/education/gaise/ Christine Franklin & Henry Kranendonk NCSM Conference March 19, 2007

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Page 1: Guidelines for Assessment and Instruction in Statistics Education A Curriculum Framework for Pre-K-12 Statistics Education The GAISE Report (2007) The

Guidelines for Assessment and Instruction in Statistics Education

A Curriculum Framework for Pre-K-12 Statistics Education

The GAISE Report (2007) The American Statistical Association

http://www.amstat.org/education/gaise/

Christine Franklin & Henry Kranendonk

NCSM Conference

March 19, 2007

Page 2: Guidelines for Assessment and Instruction in Statistics Education A Curriculum Framework for Pre-K-12 Statistics Education The GAISE Report (2007) The

Outline of Presentation

• Overview of the GAISE Report

• The Evolution of a Statistical Concept- The Mean as Fair Share/Variation from Fair Share- The Mean as the Balance Point/Variation from the Mean- The Sampling Distribution of the Mean/Variation in Sample

Means

• Summary

Page 3: Guidelines for Assessment and Instruction in Statistics Education A Curriculum Framework for Pre-K-12 Statistics Education The GAISE Report (2007) The

Benchmarks in Statistical Education in the United States (1980-2007)

• The Quantitative Literacy Project (ASA/NCTM Joint Committee, Early 1980’s)

• Curriculum and Evaluation Standards for School Mathematics (NCTM, 1989)

• Principles and Standards for School Mathematics (NCTM, 2000)

• Mathematics and Statistics College Board Standards for College Success (2006)

• The GAISE Report (2005, 2007)

Page 4: Guidelines for Assessment and Instruction in Statistics Education A Curriculum Framework for Pre-K-12 Statistics Education The GAISE Report (2007) The

GOALS of the GAISE Report

• Promote and develop statistical literacy

• Provide links with the NCTM Standards

• Discuss differences between Mathematics and Statistics*

• Clarify the role of probability in statistics*

• Illustrate concepts associated with the data analysis process*

• Present the statistics curriculum for grades Pre-K-12 as a cohesive and coherent curriculum strand*

• Provide developmental sequences of learning experiences*

Page 5: Guidelines for Assessment and Instruction in Statistics Education A Curriculum Framework for Pre-K-12 Statistics Education The GAISE Report (2007) The

Stakeholders

• Writers of state standards

• Writers of assessment items

• Curriculum directors

• Pre K-12 teachers

• Educators at teacher preparation programs 

Page 6: Guidelines for Assessment and Instruction in Statistics Education A Curriculum Framework for Pre-K-12 Statistics Education The GAISE Report (2007) The

STATISTICAL THINKING versus

MATHEMATICAL THINKING  

• The Focus of Statistics on Variation in Data

• The Importance of Context in Statistics

 

Page 7: Guidelines for Assessment and Instruction in Statistics Education A Curriculum Framework for Pre-K-12 Statistics Education The GAISE Report (2007) The

PROBABILITY Randomization

• Sampling -- "select at random from a population"

 • Experiments -- "assign at random to a

treatment"   

Page 8: Guidelines for Assessment and Instruction in Statistics Education A Curriculum Framework for Pre-K-12 Statistics Education The GAISE Report (2007) The

THE FRAMEWORKUnderlying Principles

PROBLEM SOLVING PROCESS

Formulate Questions•         clarify the problem at hand •         formulate one (or more) questions that can be answered with data  

Collect Data•         design a plan to collect appropriate data•         employ the plan to collect the data  

Analyze Data•         select appropriate graphical or numerical methods•         use these methods to analyze the data  

Interpret Results• interpret the analysis taking into account the scope of inference based on the

data collection design•       relate the interpretation to the original question

 

Page 9: Guidelines for Assessment and Instruction in Statistics Education A Curriculum Framework for Pre-K-12 Statistics Education The GAISE Report (2007) The

Developmental Levels

• The GAISE Report proposes three developmental levels for evolvingstatistical concepts.

Levels A, B, and C

Page 10: Guidelines for Assessment and Instruction in Statistics Education A Curriculum Framework for Pre-K-12 Statistics Education The GAISE Report (2007) The

The Framework Model

A Two-Dimensional Model

• One dimension is the four components of the statistical problem-solving process, along with the nature of and the focus on variability

• The second dimension is comprised of three developmental levels (A, B, and C)

Page 11: Guidelines for Assessment and Instruction in Statistics Education A Curriculum Framework for Pre-K-12 Statistics Education The GAISE Report (2007) The

THE FRAMEWORK MODEL 

ProcessComponent

Level A Level B Level C

FormulateQuestion

Beginning awareness of the statistics question distinction 

Increased awareness of the statistics question distinction 

Students can make the statistics question distinction 

CollectData

Do not yet design for differences 

Awareness of design for differences 

Students make designs for differences 

AnalyzeData

Use particular properties of distributions in context of specific example

Learn to use particular properties of distributions as tools of analysis 

Understand and use distributions in analysis as a global concept

InterpretResults

Do not look beyond the data

Acknowledge that looking beyond the data is feasible 

Able to look beyond the data in some contexts

Page 12: Guidelines for Assessment and Instruction in Statistics Education A Curriculum Framework for Pre-K-12 Statistics Education The GAISE Report (2007) The

THE FRAMEWORK MODEL 

Nature ofVariability   

Focus onVariability

Measurement variabilityNatural variabilityInduced variability  Variability within a group   

Sampling variability    

Variability within a group and variability between groups Co-variability

Chance variability    

Variability in model fitting

Page 13: Guidelines for Assessment and Instruction in Statistics Education A Curriculum Framework for Pre-K-12 Statistics Education The GAISE Report (2007) The

Activity Based Learning

• The GAISE Report promotes active learning of statistical content and concepts

Two Types of Learning Activities

• Problem Solving Activities• Concept Activities

Page 14: Guidelines for Assessment and Instruction in Statistics Education A Curriculum Framework for Pre-K-12 Statistics Education The GAISE Report (2007) The

The STN article illustrates a Problem Solving Activity across the three developmental levels.

Page 15: Guidelines for Assessment and Instruction in Statistics Education A Curriculum Framework for Pre-K-12 Statistics Education The GAISE Report (2007) The

The evolution of a statistical concept --

• What is the mean?

• Quantifying variation in data from the mean

Page 16: Guidelines for Assessment and Instruction in Statistics Education A Curriculum Framework for Pre-K-12 Statistics Education The GAISE Report (2007) The

Level A Activity

The Family Size Problem

A Conceptual Activity for:

• Developing an Understanding of the Mean as the “Fair Share” value

• Developing a Measure of Variation from “Fair Share”

Page 17: Guidelines for Assessment and Instruction in Statistics Education A Curriculum Framework for Pre-K-12 Statistics Education The GAISE Report (2007) The

A Question

How large are families today?

• Nine children were asked how many

people are in your family.

• Each child represented her/his family size with a collection snap cubes.

Page 18: Guidelines for Assessment and Instruction in Statistics Education A Curriculum Framework for Pre-K-12 Statistics Education The GAISE Report (2007) The

Snap Cube Representation for Nine Family Sizes

Page 19: Guidelines for Assessment and Instruction in Statistics Education A Curriculum Framework for Pre-K-12 Statistics Education The GAISE Report (2007) The

How might we examine the data on the family sizes for these nine children?

Page 20: Guidelines for Assessment and Instruction in Statistics Education A Curriculum Framework for Pre-K-12 Statistics Education The GAISE Report (2007) The

Ordered Snap Cube & Numerical Representations of Nine Family Sizes

2 3 3 4 4 5 6 7 9

Page 21: Guidelines for Assessment and Instruction in Statistics Education A Curriculum Framework for Pre-K-12 Statistics Education The GAISE Report (2007) The

Notice that the family sizes vary.

What if we used all our family members and tried to make all families the same size, in which case there is no variability.

How many people would be in each family?

Page 22: Guidelines for Assessment and Instruction in Statistics Education A Curriculum Framework for Pre-K-12 Statistics Education The GAISE Report (2007) The

How can we go about creating these new families?

We might start by separating all the family members into one large group.

Page 23: Guidelines for Assessment and Instruction in Statistics Education A Curriculum Framework for Pre-K-12 Statistics Education The GAISE Report (2007) The

All 43 Family Members

Page 24: Guidelines for Assessment and Instruction in Statistics Education A Curriculum Framework for Pre-K-12 Statistics Education The GAISE Report (2007) The

Step 1

Have each child select a snap cube to represent her/him-self.

These cubes are indicated in red.

Page 25: Guidelines for Assessment and Instruction in Statistics Education A Curriculum Framework for Pre-K-12 Statistics Education The GAISE Report (2007) The

Create Nine “New” Families/Step1

Page 26: Guidelines for Assessment and Instruction in Statistics Education A Curriculum Framework for Pre-K-12 Statistics Education The GAISE Report (2007) The

Step 2

Next have each child select one family member from the remaining group.

These new family members are shown in red.

Page 27: Guidelines for Assessment and Instruction in Statistics Education A Curriculum Framework for Pre-K-12 Statistics Education The GAISE Report (2007) The

Create Nine “New” Families/Step2

Page 28: Guidelines for Assessment and Instruction in Statistics Education A Curriculum Framework for Pre-K-12 Statistics Education The GAISE Report (2007) The

Continue this process untilthere are not enough family members for each child to select from.

Page 29: Guidelines for Assessment and Instruction in Statistics Education A Curriculum Framework for Pre-K-12 Statistics Education The GAISE Report (2007) The

Create Nine “New” Families/Step4

Page 30: Guidelines for Assessment and Instruction in Statistics Education A Curriculum Framework for Pre-K-12 Statistics Education The GAISE Report (2007) The

Discuss results

• The fair share value

Note that this is developing the division algorithm and eventually, the algorithm for finding the mean.

Page 31: Guidelines for Assessment and Instruction in Statistics Education A Curriculum Framework for Pre-K-12 Statistics Education The GAISE Report (2007) The

A New Problem

What if the fair share value for nine children is 6?

What are some different snap cube representations that might produce a fair share value of 6?

Page 32: Guidelines for Assessment and Instruction in Statistics Education A Curriculum Framework for Pre-K-12 Statistics Education The GAISE Report (2007) The

Snap Cube Representation of Nine Families, Each of Size 6

Page 33: Guidelines for Assessment and Instruction in Statistics Education A Curriculum Framework for Pre-K-12 Statistics Education The GAISE Report (2007) The

Have Groups of Children Create New Snap Cube Representations

For example, following are two different collections of data with a fair share value of 6.

Page 34: Guidelines for Assessment and Instruction in Statistics Education A Curriculum Framework for Pre-K-12 Statistics Education The GAISE Report (2007) The

Two Examples with Fair Share Value of 6.

Which group is “closer” to being “fair?”

Page 35: Guidelines for Assessment and Instruction in Statistics Education A Curriculum Framework for Pre-K-12 Statistics Education The GAISE Report (2007) The

How might we measure “how close” a group of numeric data is to being fair?

Page 36: Guidelines for Assessment and Instruction in Statistics Education A Curriculum Framework for Pre-K-12 Statistics Education The GAISE Report (2007) The

Which group is “closer” to being “fair?”

The upper group in blue is closer to fair since it requires only one “step” to make it fair. The lower group requires two “steps.”

Page 37: Guidelines for Assessment and Instruction in Statistics Education A Curriculum Framework for Pre-K-12 Statistics Education The GAISE Report (2007) The

How do we define a “step?”

• One step occurs when a snap cube is removed from a stack higher than the fair share value and placed on a stack lower than the fair share value .

• A measure of the degree of fairness in a snap cube distribution is the “number of steps” required to make it fair.

Note -- Fewer steps indicates closer to fair

Page 38: Guidelines for Assessment and Instruction in Statistics Education A Curriculum Framework for Pre-K-12 Statistics Education The GAISE Report (2007) The

Number of Steps to Make Fair: 8

Number of Steps to Make Fair: 9

Page 39: Guidelines for Assessment and Instruction in Statistics Education A Curriculum Framework for Pre-K-12 Statistics Education The GAISE Report (2007) The

Students completing Level A understand:

• the notion of “fair share” for a set of numeric data

• the fair share value is also called the mean value

• the algorithm for finding the mean

• the notion of “number of steps” to make fair as a measure of variability about the mean

• the fair share/mean value provides a basis for comparison between two groups of numerical data with different sizes (thus can’t use total)

Page 40: Guidelines for Assessment and Instruction in Statistics Education A Curriculum Framework for Pre-K-12 Statistics Education The GAISE Report (2007) The

Level B Activity

The Family Size Problem

• How large are families today?

A Conceptual Activity for:

• Developing an Understanding of the Mean as the “Balance Point” of a Distribution

• Developing Measures of Variation about the Mean

Page 41: Guidelines for Assessment and Instruction in Statistics Education A Curriculum Framework for Pre-K-12 Statistics Education The GAISE Report (2007) The

Level B Activity

How many people are in your family?

Nine children were asked this question. The following dot plot is one possible result for the nine children:

Page 42: Guidelines for Assessment and Instruction in Statistics Education A Curriculum Framework for Pre-K-12 Statistics Education The GAISE Report (2007) The

-+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+- 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10

Page 43: Guidelines for Assessment and Instruction in Statistics Education A Curriculum Framework for Pre-K-12 Statistics Education The GAISE Report (2007) The

Have groups of students create different dot plot representations of nine families with a mean of 6.

Page 44: Guidelines for Assessment and Instruction in Statistics Education A Curriculum Framework for Pre-K-12 Statistics Education The GAISE Report (2007) The

-+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+- 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10

-+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+- 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10

Page 45: Guidelines for Assessment and Instruction in Statistics Education A Curriculum Framework for Pre-K-12 Statistics Education The GAISE Report (2007) The

In which group do the data (family sizes) vary (differ) more from the mean value of 6?

Page 46: Guidelines for Assessment and Instruction in Statistics Education A Curriculum Framework for Pre-K-12 Statistics Education The GAISE Report (2007) The

-+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+- 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10

-+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+- 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10

4 2 1

1

0 1 2

2

3

4 3 2 0

0

0

2 3 4

Page 47: Guidelines for Assessment and Instruction in Statistics Education A Curriculum Framework for Pre-K-12 Statistics Education The GAISE Report (2007) The

In Distribution 1, the Total Distance from the Mean is 16.

In Distribution 2, the Total Distance from the Mean is 18.

Consequently, the data in Distribution 2 differ more from the mean than the data in Distribution 1.

Page 48: Guidelines for Assessment and Instruction in Statistics Education A Curriculum Framework for Pre-K-12 Statistics Education The GAISE Report (2007) The

-+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+- 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10

4 2 1

1

0 1 2

2

3

Note that the total distance for the values below the mean of 6 is 8, the same as the total distance for the values above the mean. For this reason, the distribution will “balance” at 6 (the mean)

Page 49: Guidelines for Assessment and Instruction in Statistics Education A Curriculum Framework for Pre-K-12 Statistics Education The GAISE Report (2007) The

The SAD is defined to be:

The Sum of the Absolute Deviations

Note the relationship between SAD and Number of Steps to Fair from Level A:

SAD = 2xNumber of Steps

Page 50: Guidelines for Assessment and Instruction in Statistics Education A Curriculum Framework for Pre-K-12 Statistics Education The GAISE Report (2007) The

Number of Steps to Make Fair: 8

Number of Steps to Make Fair: 9

Page 51: Guidelines for Assessment and Instruction in Statistics Education A Curriculum Framework for Pre-K-12 Statistics Education The GAISE Report (2007) The

An Illustration where the SAD doesn’t work!

Page 52: Guidelines for Assessment and Instruction in Statistics Education A Curriculum Framework for Pre-K-12 Statistics Education The GAISE Report (2007) The

-+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+- 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10

-+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+- 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10

4 4

1

1

1 1

1

1

11

Page 53: Guidelines for Assessment and Instruction in Statistics Education A Curriculum Framework for Pre-K-12 Statistics Education The GAISE Report (2007) The

The SAD is 8 for each distribution, but in the first distribution the data vary more from the mean.

Why doesn’t the SAD work?

Page 54: Guidelines for Assessment and Instruction in Statistics Education A Curriculum Framework for Pre-K-12 Statistics Education The GAISE Report (2007) The

Adjusting the SAD for group sizes yields the:

MAD = Mean Absolute Deviation

Page 55: Guidelines for Assessment and Instruction in Statistics Education A Curriculum Framework for Pre-K-12 Statistics Education The GAISE Report (2007) The

Measuring Variation about the Mean

• SAD = Sum of Absolute Deviations

• MAD = Mean of Absolute Deviations

• Variance = Mean of Squared Deviations

• Standard Deviation = Square Root of Variance

Page 56: Guidelines for Assessment and Instruction in Statistics Education A Curriculum Framework for Pre-K-12 Statistics Education The GAISE Report (2007) The

Summary of Level B and Transitions to Level C

• Mean as the balance point of a distribution

• Mean as a “central” point

• Various measures of variation about the mean.

Page 57: Guidelines for Assessment and Instruction in Statistics Education A Curriculum Framework for Pre-K-12 Statistics Education The GAISE Report (2007) The

The Mean at Level C

• At Level C, the notion of the “Sampling Distribution of the Sample Mean” is Developed.

• This development connects probability and statistics and provides the link between the descriptive statistics students have learned at Levels A and B and concepts of inferential statistics they will learn at Level C.

Page 58: Guidelines for Assessment and Instruction in Statistics Education A Curriculum Framework for Pre-K-12 Statistics Education The GAISE Report (2007) The

Eighty Circles/What is the Mean Diameter?

Page 59: Guidelines for Assessment and Instruction in Statistics Education A Curriculum Framework for Pre-K-12 Statistics Education The GAISE Report (2007) The

Activity

• Students select samples of 10 circles they considered to be representative of the 80 circles. The mean for each sample isdetermined.

• Students select simple random samples of 10 circles. The mean for each sample is determined.

Page 60: Guidelines for Assessment and Instruction in Statistics Education A Curriculum Framework for Pre-K-12 Statistics Education The GAISE Report (2007) The

How do the results from self-selection compare with random sampling?

• Following are results from two introductory-level statistics classes (50 students).

Page 61: Guidelines for Assessment and Instruction in Statistics Education A Curriculum Framework for Pre-K-12 Statistics Education The GAISE Report (2007) The

Sample Means2.22.01.81.61.41.21.0

Random Selection

Self Selection

Dotplot of Random Selection versus Self Selection

Population Mean = 1.25

Page 62: Guidelines for Assessment and Instruction in Statistics Education A Curriculum Framework for Pre-K-12 Statistics Education The GAISE Report (2007) The

Sampling Distributions provide the link to two important concepts in statistical inference.

• Margin of Error

• Statistical Significance

Page 63: Guidelines for Assessment and Instruction in Statistics Education A Curriculum Framework for Pre-K-12 Statistics Education The GAISE Report (2007) The

The STN article in your packet provides an illustration of how a sampling distribution is used to develop these statistical concepts.

Page 64: Guidelines for Assessment and Instruction in Statistics Education A Curriculum Framework for Pre-K-12 Statistics Education The GAISE Report (2007) The

SUMMARY: GOALS of GAISE Report• Promote and develop statistical literacy

• Provide links with the NCTM Standards

• Discuss differences between Mathematics and Statistics

• Clarify the role of probability in statistics

• Illustrate concepts associated with the data analysis process

• Present the statistics curriculum for grades Pre-K-12 as a cohesive and coherent curriculum strand

• Provide developmental sequences of learning experiences