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What do you notice? What do you wonder?
The purpose of this activity is for students to generate numerical data by measuring their hand spans in inches. Students trace their hands and measure their hand spans (the length from the tip of the pinky to the tip of the thumb). The student-generated data is used to demonstrate creating a line plot, as they work collectively to represent their hand spans measured in inches. Students add a representation of the length of their hand spans by drawing an x on a sticky note and adding it to the line plot. They make sense of the way the line plot represents a number of measurements and the size of each measurement (MP2). The class line plot will be used in the next activity to discuss the purpose and features of a line plot.
My hand span is ____________ inches.
The purpose of this activity is for students to interpret data represented in a line plot. They engage in a discussion about what they notice and how a line plot can be used to interpret data. After highlighting the features of a line plot, students answer questions about the lengths of students’ hand spans. In the Synthesis, the importance of making Xs the same size in order to accurately reflect our data is stressed (MP6), as students will create their own line plots in later lessons.
“Today, we learned a new way to display data—a line plot.”
Display the images from the Warm-up:
“What is the same about the bar graphs and line plots?” (Both graphs have numbers. The numbers go up by ones. The bars and the Xs go up in the graphs.)
"What is different?" (One graph is about glove sizes and the other is about hand spans. One has bars and the other has Xs. In the bar graph, numbers are on the side. In the line plot, the numbers are on the bottom.)
“What do the numbers tell us in each graph?” (The numbers in the Glove Sizes graph tell us how many people have each of the glove sizes. The numbers in the Hand Span of Teachers line plot tells us the length in inches of teachers’ hand spans.)