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Gentle giants

This is a level 4 number link activity from the Figure It Out series. It is focused on ordering decimals to 3 places and adding and subtracting decimals. A PDF of the student activity is included.

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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:

  • Order decimals to 3 decimal places.
  • Add and subtract decimals.
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Gentle giants

Achievement objectives

NA4-2: Understand addition and subtraction of fractions, decimals, and integers.

Required materials

  • Figure It Out, Link, Number, Book Five, "Gentle giants", page 18
  • a calculator

See Materials that come with this resource to download:

  • Gentle giants activity (.pdf)

Activity

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For question 1, the students will need to know how to order decimals and also how to find the difference between two decimal numbers (in this case, the claimed and actual heights).

The students could measure out on the classroom wall the actual heights of the tallest and shortest giants (Zang Jinlian and Paul Hencock respectively). They would then need consider what the “.459 metres” part of Zang Jinlian’s height means and what the “.184 metres” part of Paul Hencock’s height means.

As an extension, you could ask the students to display the data on a stem-and-leaf graph or on a box-and-whisker graph. They could use their graphs to find the median, compare this to the mean, and consider why the two differ.

Stem-and-leaf graph:

A stem and leaf graph displaying height.

The median here works out at 2.305. It is halfway between 2.299 and 2.311, the two middle scores.

Box-and-whisker graph:

A number line displaying height from 2.1 to 2.5 and a box and whisker graph below showing the median is 2.305.

The box-and-whisker graph shows that the giants range in height from 2.184 metres to 2.459 metres and that the height of the 50 percent of giants between the lower quartile and the upper quartile is within the range 2.285 metres to 2.336 metres, a range of just 51 millimetres (or 5.1 centimetres). The other advantage in constructing a box-and-whisker graph is that it requires the students to consider in some depth what heights such as 2.285 metres, 2.305 metres, and 2.336 metres mean in order to locate them on the metre number line.

A possible extension of question 2 is to investigate the mean height of the students in the class, how this differs from the median height, why the median may be a more useful indicator of the average height (it is not affected by extremes (outliers) in the way that a mean score is), and the range of heights for the 50 percent of students who lie between the lower and upper quartiles.

1.

a.

Giant

Actual height (m)

Z.J.

2.459

E.B.

2.362

F.B.

2.343

J.E.

2.337

M.A.C.

2.336

C.W-G.

2.335

S.A.

2.317

J.P.

2.312

M.P.

2.311

R.R.

2.299

B.G.

2.298

B.H.

2.297

E.C.

2.286

J.T.

2.285

P.M.

2.222

D.C.

2.221

J.L.

2.209

P.H.

2.184


b. Daniel Cajanus

c. Sandy Allen. (His claimed height and his actual height are the same.)

d. 2.301 m (to 3 d.p.)

2.

a.–b. Answers will vary.

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