1 / 14

Tanks, Planes, and UNICEF

Tanks, Planes, and UNICEF. Math Olympiad 2011 Northwest Missouri State University Neil Hatfield. Reasoning and Sense Making with Data Analysis. Statistical Problem Solving. Formulating a question (questions) that can be addressed with data.

bianca
Télécharger la présentation

Tanks, Planes, and UNICEF

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Tanks, Planes, and UNICEF Math Olympiad 2011 Northwest Missouri State University Neil Hatfield Reasoning and Sense Making with Data Analysis

  2. Statistical Problem Solving • Formulating a question (questions) that can be addressed with data. • Designing and employing a plan for data collection. • Analyzing and summarizing that data. • Interpreting the results from the analysis, and answering the question(s) on the basis of the data. • NCTM (2000) and Guidelines for Assessment and Instruction in Statistics Education (2007)

  3. Reasoning and Sense Making • Common Thread: Focus on making sense of and reasoning about the variation in data. • “Why is our data not all the same?” • Data Analysis • Modeling Variability • Connecting Statistics and Probability • Interpreting Designed Statistical Studies

  4. Data Analysis • Gaining insight about a solution to a statistics question by • Collecting Data • Describing Features of the Data • Using Graphical and Tabular Representations • Numerical Summaries

  5. Modeling Variability • Developing probability models to describe the long-run behavior of observations of a random variable. • The design and implementation of a simulation provides transitional steps in the development of reasonable mathematical models for describing the long-run behavior of a random variable.

  6. Connecting Statistics and Probability • By incorporating randomness, probability provides a way to make sense of the variation in the sample. • Sampling distribution of a sample statistic summarizes the long-run behavior of the statistic from repeated random sampling. • Sampling distributions make crucial links among data analysis, probability, and inferential reasoning in statistics.

  7. Connecting Statistics and Probability

  8. Interpreting Designed Statistical Studies • Students should understand that the scope of inference for a study is related to the manner in which the data are collected. • Sampling distributions offer a way to quantify the uncertainty associated with statistical inference. • The reasoning employed in statistical inference is often quite difficult for students • Using a simulation to create a sampling distribution offers an intuitive way to help students develop this reasoning.

  9. Three Activities • Tanks: How Statistics Won World War II • Variation of the famous World War II German Tank Problem. • Planes: Where to Put the Armor? • World War II British Bombers (Operations Research) • UNICEF: What Does It Show? • Deceptive Statistics

  10. TanksHow Statistics Won World War II • Formulating a question or questions: • Done for the students, initially; homework • Designing and Employing a plan for data collection. • Data Analysis—drawing random samples • Analyzing and summarizing the data. • Data Analysis—finding statistics • Modeling Variability—determining variance • Interpreting the results from the analysis. • Connecting Statistics and Probability—randomness, simulation, bias • Interpreting Studies—how to choose a good estimator

  11. PlanesWhere to Put the Armor? • Formulating a question or questions: • Question Analysis—is it really the right question? • Designing and Employing a plan for data collection. • Data Analysis—collecting the right data, biased data • Analyzing and summarizing the data. • Data Analysis—finding statistics • Modeling Variability—determining variance • Interpreting the results from the analysis. • Connecting Statistics and Probability—simulation, biased data • Interpreting Studies—answering the question with the right data

  12. UNICEFWhat Does It Show? • Formulating a question or questions: • Question Analysis—What is the question? • Designing and Employing a plan for data collection. • Data Analysis—Where did they get their data? • Analyzing and summarizing the data. • Data Analysis—What do their summaries really tell us? • Data Analysis—What are graphs really honest? • Interpreting the results from the analysis. • Interpreting Studies—Does the data support what they said?

  13. Purpose • Reasoning and Sense Making • Data Analysis • Get students to think critically about the world around them.

  14. Materials • Like what you’ve seen? • You can download all the materials from my website: • You may also email me at S267115@nwmissouri.edu http://catpages.nwmissouri.edu/s/15/s267115/presentations.html

More Related