Coordinating student learning and teacher activity – The case of Savannah: Motivating an understanding of representativeness through examination of distributions of data
Citation
Leavy, A. (2009) 'Coordinating student learning and teacher activity – The case of Savannah: Motivating an understanding of representativeness through examination of distributions of data.' Second National Conference on Research in Mathematics Education, 14th and 15th September, 2007.
Leavy, A. (2009) 'Coordinating student learning and teacher activity – The case of Savannah: Motivating an understanding of representativeness through examination of distributions of data.' Second National Conference on Research in Mathematics Education, 14th and 15th September, 2007.
Abstract
This research study investigated the measures chosen by five 4th to 8th grade students when selecting statistical measures to describe distributions of data. Over the course of eight weeks of instruction, individual teaching experiments were conducted to investigate the development of understanding of distribution. The results indicate that consideration of representativeness was a major factor that motivated modification of approaches to constructing indices of distributions. This paper outlines the case of a 4th grade student who participated in the study and narrates her journey as she grappled with increasingly complex statistical ideas relating to representativeness.
Keywords
StudentLearning
Teacher
Activity
Motivating
Understanding
Representativeness
Examination
Distributions
Data