Sign in to view assessments and invite other educators
Sign in using your existing Kendall Hunt account. If you don’t have one, create an educator account.
Lin surveyed 30 students about the longest time they had ever run.
Andre asked them about their favorite color.
How could Lin and Andre display their data sets? Would they represent them in the same way? Why or why not?
The purpose of the discussion is for students to think about different representations of data and to emphasize the difference in categorical and numerical data types.
Select previously identified students to share their responses and record for all to see. To highlight the differences between the representations, ask:
After the responses have been shared, ask, "Why couldn't Lin and Andre use the same graph type to represent their data?" (Lin has numerical data and Andre has categorical data.)
Some students may struggle to find a good way to number the axes so that the data is visible, but not misleading. As students have already seen in scatter plots for this unit, it is not essential to start from 0 on a scatter plot. To accurately show the data, ask students to find the minimum and maximum values in the data set and use those to help think about reasonable boundaries for the left, right, bottom, and top sides of the scatter plot. The increments should be chosen based on the minimum and maximum values of the boundaries.
In most cases, estimates of position can be used to plot the points in a scatter plot, but using technology makes it more precise.