college and career-readiness conference summer 2015 algebra 2 using data to make inferences and...

46
College and Career-Readiness Conference Summer 2015 STATS STANDARDS ALGEBRA 2 USING DATA TO MAKE INFERENCES AND JUSTIFY CONCLUSIONS

Upload: ruth-carr

Post on 29-Jan-2016

216 views

Category:

Documents


0 download

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: College and Career-Readiness Conference Summer 2015 ALGEBRA 2 USING DATA TO MAKE INFERENCES AND JUSTIFY CONCLUSIONS

College and Career-Readiness ConferenceSummer

2015

STATS STANDARDS

ALGEBRA 2

USING DATA TO MAKE INFERENCES AND JUSTIFY CONCLUSIONS

Page 2: College and Career-Readiness Conference Summer 2015 ALGEBRA 2 USING DATA TO MAKE INFERENCES AND JUSTIFY CONCLUSIONS

Introductions

Mike Parker – Algebra & Stats Teacher at Patterson Mill High School (Harford County)

Brett Parker – Algebra & Geometry Teacher at C. Milton Wright High School (Harford County)

Page 3: College and Career-Readiness Conference Summer 2015 ALGEBRA 2 USING DATA TO MAKE INFERENCES AND JUSTIFY CONCLUSIONS

TODAY’S OUTCOMES

Participants will:1. Briefly review the instructional shift, COHERENCE, as

related to making inferences and justifying conclusions.

2. Look at the PARCC Model Content Framework and Evidence Statements for the high school statistics and probability standards.

3. Take an in-depth look at the S-ID.4 standard and the S-IC standards taught in Algebra 2.

4. Share best practices and identify muddy points.

Page 4: College and Career-Readiness Conference Summer 2015 ALGEBRA 2 USING DATA TO MAKE INFERENCES AND JUSTIFY CONCLUSIONS

OUTCOME 1

Participants will:1. Review the instructional shift of

COHERENCE.

Page 6: College and Career-Readiness Conference Summer 2015 ALGEBRA 2 USING DATA TO MAKE INFERENCES AND JUSTIFY CONCLUSIONS

GRADE-TO-GRADE COHERENCE

In what grade/subject do students:Use relative frequencies calculated for rows or columns to describe possible association between the two variables.Relate the choice of measures of center and variability to the shape of the data distribution Use measures of center and measures of variability for numerical data from random samples to draw informal comparative inferences about two populations.

Page 7: College and Career-Readiness Conference Summer 2015 ALGEBRA 2 USING DATA TO MAKE INFERENCES AND JUSTIFY CONCLUSIONS

GRADE-TO-GRADE COHERENCE

In what grade/subject do students:Use relative frequencies calculated for rows or columns to describe possible association between the two variables. – Grade 8/Algebra 1Relate the choice of measures of center and variability to the shape of the data distribution. – Grade 6 Use measures of center and measures of variability for numerical data from random samples to draw informal comparative inferences about two populations. – Grade 7

Page 8: College and Career-Readiness Conference Summer 2015 ALGEBRA 2 USING DATA TO MAKE INFERENCES AND JUSTIFY CONCLUSIONS

OUTCOME 2

Participants will:2. Look at the PARCC Model Content

Framework and Evidence Statements for the high school statistics and probability standards.

Page 9: College and Career-Readiness Conference Summer 2015 ALGEBRA 2 USING DATA TO MAKE INFERENCES AND JUSTIFY CONCLUSIONS

PARCC Model Content FrameworkAlgebra 2

Page 10: College and Career-Readiness Conference Summer 2015 ALGEBRA 2 USING DATA TO MAKE INFERENCES AND JUSTIFY CONCLUSIONS

PARCC Evidence Statements

Algebra 2 Refer to the Algebra 2 PARCC Evidence

Statements. Find the following Evidence Statement Keys

and read at the “Clarifications”: S-ID.4 S-IC.2 S-IC.3-1

What do notice about the “Clarifications” provided by the PARRC Evidence Statement?

Page 11: College and Career-Readiness Conference Summer 2015 ALGEBRA 2 USING DATA TO MAKE INFERENCES AND JUSTIFY CONCLUSIONS

OUTCOME 3

Participants will:3. Take an in-depth look at the S-ID.4:

Use the mean and standard deviation of a data set to fit it to a normal distribution and to estimate population percentages.

Page 12: College and Career-Readiness Conference Summer 2015 ALGEBRA 2 USING DATA TO MAKE INFERENCES AND JUSTIFY CONCLUSIONS

Essential Skills and Knowledge Ability to construct, interpret and use

normal curves, based on standard deviation

Ability to identify data sets as approximately normal or not.

Ability to estimate and interpret area under curves using the Empirical Rule.

Page 13: College and Career-Readiness Conference Summer 2015 ALGEBRA 2 USING DATA TO MAKE INFERENCES AND JUSTIFY CONCLUSIONS

Density Curves and The Normal Distribution

*originlab.com

Examples:

Heights of PeopleBlood PressureTest ScoresIQ Scores

Page 14: College and Career-Readiness Conference Summer 2015 ALGEBRA 2 USING DATA TO MAKE INFERENCES AND JUSTIFY CONCLUSIONS

Density Curves and The Normal Distribution

Always remains on or above the horizontal axis

The total area under the curve is 1. An area under a density curve gives

the proportion of observations that fall in a range of values.

It is a description of the overall pattern of the distribution.

Page 15: College and Career-Readiness Conference Summer 2015 ALGEBRA 2 USING DATA TO MAKE INFERENCES AND JUSTIFY CONCLUSIONS

Standard Deviation

The mean is the balance point of the curve. (As if it were a solid object.)

The median divides the curve into two equal areas.

It is difficult to locate the standard deviation by eye.

http://condor.depaul.edu

Page 16: College and Career-Readiness Conference Summer 2015 ALGEBRA 2 USING DATA TO MAKE INFERENCES AND JUSTIFY CONCLUSIONS

Normal Distributions

Normal curves are bell-shaped symmetric density curves.

Has all the properties of density curves. There are 3 rules for working with

Normal distributions: 1. Make a picture, 2. Make a picture, 3. Make a picture!

Page 17: College and Career-Readiness Conference Summer 2015 ALGEBRA 2 USING DATA TO MAKE INFERENCES AND JUSTIFY CONCLUSIONS

68-95-99.7 Rule (Empirical Rule) 68% of the observations fall within 1

standard deviation of the mean (mean ± 1s)

95% of the observations fall within 2 standard deviations of the mean. (mean ± 2s)

99.7% of the observations fall within 3 standard deviations of the mean. (mean ± 3s)

Page 18: College and Career-Readiness Conference Summer 2015 ALGEBRA 2 USING DATA TO MAKE INFERENCES AND JUSTIFY CONCLUSIONS

Breaking Down the Empirical Rule

Guiding Questions: Where is the mean located? Where would you locate the standard deviations

from the mean? What area of the curve represents 68% of the data? What happens if we only want +1 standard

deviation from the mean? How can we determine the area between +1 and

+2 standard deviations? Is there data more than three standard deviations

from the mean?

Page 19: College and Career-Readiness Conference Summer 2015 ALGEBRA 2 USING DATA TO MAKE INFERENCES AND JUSTIFY CONCLUSIONS

Empirical Rule: Breaking it down

Label the area/percentages (68-95-99.7) between 1, 2, and 3 standard deviations on either side of the mean on the normal curve at the top of your paper using what you have learned from the Empirical Rule.

Page 20: College and Career-Readiness Conference Summer 2015 ALGEBRA 2 USING DATA TO MAKE INFERENCES AND JUSTIFY CONCLUSIONS

Solution

http://sites.stat.psu.edu/~ajw13/stat500_su_res/notes/lesson02/lesson02_03.html

Page 21: College and Career-Readiness Conference Summer 2015 ALGEBRA 2 USING DATA TO MAKE INFERENCES AND JUSTIFY CONCLUSIONS

Solution

Page 22: College and Career-Readiness Conference Summer 2015 ALGEBRA 2 USING DATA TO MAKE INFERENCES AND JUSTIFY CONCLUSIONS

Released PARCC PBA - #17

The heights of the male students at a college are approximately normally distributed. Within this curve, 95% of the heights, centered about the mean, are between 62 and 78 inches. The standard deviation is 4 inches. Use this information to estimate the mean height of the males. Approximate the probability that a male

student is taller than 74 inches. Explain how you determined your answers.

Page 23: College and Career-Readiness Conference Summer 2015 ALGEBRA 2 USING DATA TO MAKE INFERENCES AND JUSTIFY CONCLUSIONS
Page 24: College and Career-Readiness Conference Summer 2015 ALGEBRA 2 USING DATA TO MAKE INFERENCES AND JUSTIFY CONCLUSIONS

PARCC – EOY #16 Part A

Page 25: College and Career-Readiness Conference Summer 2015 ALGEBRA 2 USING DATA TO MAKE INFERENCES AND JUSTIFY CONCLUSIONS

PARCC – EOY #16 Part B

Page 26: College and Career-Readiness Conference Summer 2015 ALGEBRA 2 USING DATA TO MAKE INFERENCES AND JUSTIFY CONCLUSIONS

S.IC - Making Inferences & Justifying Conclusions in Algebra 2

IC.A.1- Making inferences about population parameters based on random sample.

IC.A.2- Decide if model is consistent with results of data-generating process: using simulation.

IC.B.3- Purposes of and differences among sample surveys, experiments, and observational studies.

IC.B.4- Use data from a survey to estimate population mean or proportion.

IC.B.5- Use data from randomized experiment to compare two treatments; use simulations to decide if differences between parameters are significant.

IC.B.6- Evaluate reports based on data.

Page 27: College and Career-Readiness Conference Summer 2015 ALGEBRA 2 USING DATA TO MAKE INFERENCES AND JUSTIFY CONCLUSIONS

OUTCOME 3

Participants will:3. Take an in-depth look at the S-

IC.A.2: Decide if a specified model is consistent with results from a given data-generating process, e.g., using simulation.

Page 28: College and Career-Readiness Conference Summer 2015 ALGEBRA 2 USING DATA TO MAKE INFERENCES AND JUSTIFY CONCLUSIONS

Essential Skills and Knowledge Ability to calculate and analyze

theoretical and experimental probabilities accurately.

Ability to design, conduct, and interpret the results of simulations.

Ability to explain and use the Law of Large Numbers. (The average of a large number of trials should approach the expected value.)

Page 29: College and Career-Readiness Conference Summer 2015 ALGEBRA 2 USING DATA TO MAKE INFERENCES AND JUSTIFY CONCLUSIONS

PARCC Evidence Statements

Algebra 2 - EOYS-IC.2

Decide if a specified model is consistent with results from a given data-generating process, e.g., using simulation. For example, a model says a spinning coin falls heads up with probability 0.5. Would a result of 5 tails in a row cause you to question the model?

MP.2, MP.4

i.) Tasks might ask the students to look at the results of a simulation and decide how plausible the observed value is with respect to the simulation. For an example, see question 7 on the calculator section of the online practice test (http://practice.parcc.testnav.com/#).

Page 30: College and Career-Readiness Conference Summer 2015 ALGEBRA 2 USING DATA TO MAKE INFERENCES AND JUSTIFY CONCLUSIONS

Simulation

A simulation imitates a real situation. Is supposed to give similar results. Acts as a predictor of what should

actually happen. It is a model in which repeated

experiments are carried out for the purpose of estimating in real life.

Page 31: College and Career-Readiness Conference Summer 2015 ALGEBRA 2 USING DATA TO MAKE INFERENCES AND JUSTIFY CONCLUSIONS

Monty Hall

http://stayorswitch.com/

Page 33: College and Career-Readiness Conference Summer 2015 ALGEBRA 2 USING DATA TO MAKE INFERENCES AND JUSTIFY CONCLUSIONS

HSA

3.1.3: The student will calculate theoretical probability or use simulations or statistical inferences from data to estimate the probability of an event.

Sample problem:In a simulation designed to represent families with two children, two coins are tossed to model the gender of each child. The results of 50 trials are shown in the table below.

Based on the results in the table, what is the probability that a family with two children have at least one boy?A. 0.30

B. 0.44 C. 0.58 D. 0.74

Page 34: College and Career-Readiness Conference Summer 2015 ALGEBRA 2 USING DATA TO MAKE INFERENCES AND JUSTIFY CONCLUSIONS

PARCC- EOY

Page 35: College and Career-Readiness Conference Summer 2015 ALGEBRA 2 USING DATA TO MAKE INFERENCES AND JUSTIFY CONCLUSIONS

PARCC- EOY

Page 36: College and Career-Readiness Conference Summer 2015 ALGEBRA 2 USING DATA TO MAKE INFERENCES AND JUSTIFY CONCLUSIONS

OUTCOME 3

Participants will:4. Take an in-depth look at the S-

IC.B.3: Recognize the purposes of and differences among sample surveys, experiments, and observational studies; explain how randomization relates to each.

Page 37: College and Career-Readiness Conference Summer 2015 ALGEBRA 2 USING DATA TO MAKE INFERENCES AND JUSTIFY CONCLUSIONS

Essential Skills and Knowledge Ability to construct sample surveys,

experiments, and observational studies. Understanding of the limitations of

observational studies. Ability to recognize and avoid bias

Page 38: College and Career-Readiness Conference Summer 2015 ALGEBRA 2 USING DATA TO MAKE INFERENCES AND JUSTIFY CONCLUSIONS

PARCC Evidence Statements

Algebra 2 - EOYS-IC.3-1 Recognize the purposes of and differences

among sample surveys, experiments, and observational studies.

MP.4 i.) The "explain" part of standard S-IC.3 is not assessed here; ii.) Purposes and distinctions are as follows: a. Survey: To estimate or make a decision about a characteristic of a population based on random sample. b. Experiment: To estimate or compare the effects of different treatments based on randomized assignment of treatments to units for the purpose of establishing a cause and effect relationship. c. .Observational study: To suggest patterns and/or associations among variables where treatments or conditions are inherent and not assigned to units.

Page 39: College and Career-Readiness Conference Summer 2015 ALGEBRA 2 USING DATA TO MAKE INFERENCES AND JUSTIFY CONCLUSIONS

Surveys, Observational Studies, & Experiments

Page 40: College and Career-Readiness Conference Summer 2015 ALGEBRA 2 USING DATA TO MAKE INFERENCES AND JUSTIFY CONCLUSIONS

Activity

Sort the Research Questions into three categories of which would be the best method of data collection: Sample Survey Experiment Observational Study

Experiment Observational Study

Page 41: College and Career-Readiness Conference Summer 2015 ALGEBRA 2 USING DATA TO MAKE INFERENCES AND JUSTIFY CONCLUSIONS

Solutions

Sample Survey Experiment Observational Study

Who is going to win next election?

Do students learn better in online courses?

Is there an association between eating processed foods and life expectancy?

Is Justin Bieber more or less popular than 2 years ago?

Do running shoes versus other tennis shoes really help performance?

Is smoking related to heart disease?

Do a majority of Marylanders support gay marriage?

Does eating chocolate help you do better on a test?

Is binge drinking associated with depression?

Are cruises more fun than hotel vacations?

Page 42: College and Career-Readiness Conference Summer 2015 ALGEBRA 2 USING DATA TO MAKE INFERENCES AND JUSTIFY CONCLUSIONS

PARCC – EOY (#33 Paper, #25 Computer)

Page 43: College and Career-Readiness Conference Summer 2015 ALGEBRA 2 USING DATA TO MAKE INFERENCES AND JUSTIFY CONCLUSIONS

PARCC - EOY

Page 44: College and Career-Readiness Conference Summer 2015 ALGEBRA 2 USING DATA TO MAKE INFERENCES AND JUSTIFY CONCLUSIONS

What have you done that works?

Best Practices

Page 45: College and Career-Readiness Conference Summer 2015 ALGEBRA 2 USING DATA TO MAKE INFERENCES AND JUSTIFY CONCLUSIONS

Additional Resources

Illustrative Mathematics PARCC Practice Test American Statistical Association

Page 46: College and Career-Readiness Conference Summer 2015 ALGEBRA 2 USING DATA TO MAKE INFERENCES AND JUSTIFY CONCLUSIONS

What are the muddiest points?

Record any question you still have after today’s presentation on your post-it note. Please provide your name and email address.

Stick your post-it on the door as you leave today, and we will respond. Thank you!