Skip to main content

Choice squares

This is a level 2 statistics activity from the Figure It Out series. A PDF of the student activity is included.

<img src="/images/decorative.jpg" alt"" />

Tags

  • AudienceKaiako
  • Learning AreaMathematics and Statistics
  • Resource LanguageEnglish
  • Resource typeActivity
  • SeriesFigure It Out

About this resource

Figure It Out is a series of 80 books published between 1999 and 2009 to support teaching and learning in New Zealand classrooms.

This resource provides the teachers' notes and answers for one activity from the Figure It Out series. A printable PDF of the student activity can be downloaded from the materials that come with this resource.

Specific learning outcomes:

  • Discuss which graph shows the data most clearly.
  • Answer questions from graphs.
  • Pose a question to investigate.
  • Collect and sort the data.
  • Construct a bar graph.
Reviews
0

Choice squares

Achievement objectives

S2-1: Conduct investigations using the statistical enquiry cycle: posing and answering questions; gathering, sorting, and displaying category and whole-number data; communicating findings based on the data.

S2-2: Compare statements with the features of simple data displays from statistical investigations or probability activities undertaken by others.

Description of mathematics

This diagram shows the areas of statistics involved in this activity.

Investigation

Literacy

Probability

P

P

D

A

C

 

The bottom half of the diagram represents the 5 stages of the statistics investigation cycle, PPDAC (problem, plan, data, analysis, and conclusion).

Required materials

  • Figure It Out, Levels 2–3, Statistics Revised Edition, "Choice squares", pages 1–3
  • 3 class sets of blank choice squares (see Choice squares CM) for each student
  • classmates

See Materials that come with this resource to download:

  • Choice squares activity (.pdf)
  • Choice squares CM (.pdf)

Activity

 | 

Before the students go on to answer the questions in this activity, discuss with them why Room 8 might want to find out which fruits were most preferred in their class. It is important that students see a reason for their own or others’ investigations. A reason is suggested in question 4, which implies that the students are dissatisfied with their lunchbox contents.

You could also discuss why the students in Room 8 decided to use choice squares to gather their information. When your students do their own investigations, they can design suitable squares with the help of the blank copymaster (to keep the squares the same size) and then photocopy them for use.

The ? referred to in question 1 makes it possible to restrict the number of categories while ensuring that everyone can respond to the survey. As indicated in the answers, the ? in some surveys can mean “don’t know”, but in this activity, it corresponds to the “other” category found in survey questions such as:

  • What is your favourite meat?

… beef

… lamb

… pork

… chicken

… other

If a large number of people picked the "other" category, this would warrant further investigation. It may be, for example, that quite a few people would have selected venison if this option had been offered. (How might a vegetarian respond, given the above options?)

Question 2 involves comparing three different data displays: a strip graph, a bar graph, and a pie chart. Discuss the characteristics of each type of graph.

Strip graph

All like objects are grouped together.

There are no gaps between categories.

The graph cannot show empty categories.

Bar graph

There are gaps between the columns.

There are two axes: one showing categories, the other the number in each category.

Pie chart

All data that is alike is grouped together.

There are no gaps between sectors.

The chart cannot show empty categories.

It is not usually clear how many items are included in each category.


In question 2, the strip graph is manipulated to form a pie chart and a bar graph. This makes it clear that the data displayed in the three examples is the same data displayed in three different ways, not three distinct lots of data.
These diagrams may be helpful:

A pie chart is divided into six different sections.

For the pie chart, bend the strip graph around to form a circle and draw line segments from the centre to the circumference to show each category.

For the bar graph, cut each section of fruit and use it for the bars:

A line graph displays statistics on favourite fruits: 7 apple, 5 banana, 3 orange, 3 plum, 3 other, and 1 pear.

Ensure that the students understand the importance of labelling axes and giving each graph a succinct, descriptive title. These should not be viewed as technical requirements or "teacher says" rules but as keys to interpretation.

In each of the three graphs, the area allocated to each category is proportional to the number of items or values it represents; if one of the sectors in a pie chart (for example) is twice the area of another, it represents twice the number of items or values.

The students could collect the data for question 3a as a class and then work through the questions either as individuals or as small groups working independently. If the students’ own surveys bring a large number of ? responses, suggest they treat this as an opportunity for refining the options. They can then administer a revised survey.

After the data is collated and displayed in a graph, questions 3b and 3c will help the students interpret their results. Although the task is a simple one, encourage your students to state their findings in writing. By doing so, they learn how to make interpretative statements and then put them up for scrutiny by classmates.

It is important that the students understand that question 4 introduces a new set of data, this time showing what is in Room 8’s lunchboxes, not what the students would prefer to be there.

Question 4a introduces the idea that survey questions can sometimes allow for multiple responses from one person. A quick look at the students’ own lunches would illustrate that some (perhaps many) contain more than one fruit.

Question 4b asks students if they can link the "favourites" data with the "actuals" data. While some thoughtful comparisons can be made, the important idea here is that the data in the two graphs is not linked to particular individuals. It is impossible to tell whether a student who has put herself down as an apple lover in the first data set happens to have an apple in her lunchbox that day.

Note that although the vertical axes on the graphs in question 1 are not numbered, the graphs are easy to interpret.

Your students should be given the opportunity to answer question 2 with a minimum of assistance. Let them find a way of clearly representing the two sets of data in a single graph in such a way that none of the original data is lost. Avoid over-emphasising technical correctness, especially at this level. What matters is that the students are gaining confidence in their ability to create graphs that tell stories. They can test their graphs out on their peers.

This activity would make an excellent assessment task because it encompasses all aspects of the statistical enquiry cycle.

Activity 1

1.

Those whose favourite fruit is not pictured can use the ?. (The ? could also mean "don’t know", but in this case, the graphs in the activity show that it means "other".)

2.

Answers will vary. You may say the bar graph because it is easy to identify the tallest column, or the pie chart because it is clear which sector is the biggest sector. If you ask yourself, "Which graph most clearly shows how many voted for the most preferred fruit?" your answer should be the bar graph because the numbered vertical axis makes it possible to see in an instant how many people made each choice.

3.

a.–c. Results and comments will vary.

For 3 c ii, a pie chart would probably show these differences more clearly.

4.

a. Of those students who had fruit, some must have had more than one kind of fruit in their lunchbox.

b. No. Everyone had a favourite fruit, yet 10 students (nearly half the class) had no fruit in their lunchbox. Also, it is not possible to tell if the person who, for example, had the orange in their lunchbox was one of those who said that oranges were their favourite fruit; neither graph identifies individuals.

c. Possible answers may include:

  • While all students had a favourite fruit, almost half had no fruit in their lunchbox.
  • Students should be involved in making up their lunchboxes.
  • Parents should talk to their children about what goes into lunchboxes.

Activity 2

1.

Possible answers:

  • Football is popular with both the girls and the boys (4 girls and 3 boys).
  • For the boys, rugby and football are both more popular than other sports (4 votes for rugby and 3 for football).
  • Netball is only popular with girls (4 girls).
  • More girls than boys like hockey (3 girls but only 1 boy).
  • Only two people (1 girl and 1 boy) chose skiing.

2.

Class activity. Graphs and discussion will vary.

Activity 3

Results will vary.

"Choice squares" can be used to develop these key competencies:

  • thinking
  • using language, symbols, and texts
  • participating and contributing.

The quality of the images on this page may vary depending on the device you are using.