Transcript slides
Teaching Uncertainty to
High School Students
Roberta Harnett
MAR 550
Current curriculum
Only 2% of college-bound H.S. students
had statistics courses (1988)
– 160 statistics courses in 13 departments at one
university
Biology
Physics
Math
– NCTM Principles and Standards for School
Mathematics (http://www.nctm.org/standards)
– Uncertainty is part of NYS math standards for
all grades
Nature of Science
Science is a search for the ”right” answer
– Authoritative, objective, and factual
– Uncertainty in science is counterintuitive, and
often not expressed explicitly in problems
– The “true” value of something can be
measured, deviations from this are errors
caused by students
Point reasoning vs. set reasoning
– More students in point than set reasoning
category
Misconceptions
Marble
task:
– Two bags have black and white counters
Bag
J: 3 black and 1 white
Bag K: 6 black and 2 white
Which bag gives the better chance of picking a
black counter?
A) Same chance
B) Bag J
C) Bag K
D) Don't know
Why?________________________
Answer
Correct
answer:
A (¾ vs 6/8 = ¾ black counters)
50%
chose C because there were
more blacks in bag K (39%)
Ratio concept in probability
Little improvement with age
Randomness
Students
asked to identify which
distribution of snowflakes and which
sequences of 0's and 1's were random
Students expected patterns in
randomness
Sequence of coin tosses
– Can the teacher guess which is random,
and which is designed by the student?
Kahneman and Tversky
Representativeness
– Even small samples should reflect
distribution or the process which
produced the random event you’re
looking at
– Neglect of sample size
Chance
of getting 7 out of 10 heads is same
as chance of getting 70 out of 100 heads
– Sequence of children born BGGBGB vs.
BBBBGB vs. BBBGGG
Representativeness
Assume
that the chance of having a
boy or girl baby is the same. Over the
course of a year, in which type of
hospital would you expect there to be
more days on which at least 60% of
the babies born were boys?
A) In a large hospital
B) In a small hospital
C) It makes no difference
Representativeness
Assume
that the chance of having a
boy or girl baby is the same. Over the
course of a year, in which type of
hospital would you expect there to be
more days on which at least 60% of
the babies born were boys?
A) In a large hospital
B) In a small hospital
C) It makes no difference
Judgemental Heuristics
Availability
– People judge probability of event based
on how well they remember instances of
that event
– Our ideas of probability are often biased
because we don't remember frequencies
of events that happen to us the same
way we remember events that happen to
other people
Conditionals
Urn problem
– P(W1|W2) vs P(W2|W1)
Students understand conditionals when
they can use a causal relationship
– How can conditioning be done based on event
that happens after the event it conditions?
Misconceptions can be corrected by
simulations of the problems
Outcome-oriented
Each
trial of an experiment is a
seperate, individual phenomenon
Students think that they should
predict for certain what will happen,
instead of what is likely to happen
Maintain original predictions even
when evidence contradicts them
Understanding means
Students
believe samples should be
representative, regardless of sample
size
No difference between sample and
population mean
Students don't understand how to
weight means by sample size
Addressing Problems
NCTM
standards to address problems
in math
NCLB has caused changes to be made
in curriculum in all subjects
Science and Technology standards
Students must be confronted with
their misconceptions
– Simulations
Constructivism
Students
must construct their own
ideas
Construct knowledge to fit what they
already know or believe about the
world
Difficulty replacing old ideas
– Inquiry based learning
– 5E lesson style
Engage,
explore, explain, elaborate, evaluate
Constructivion vs. Acception
Construction leads
to understanding
details of a problem
Can use concept in
new situation
Accepting facts
(without
constructing
knowledge)
focuses on
superficial details
Can only solve
problems which
are presented the
same way
Cognitive factors
Field-dependant
Reflective
Sensory
vs. field-independent
vs. impulsive
modality
VARK
Traditional
teaching methods apply
mostly to A/R learners
Research has shown that teaching to a
particular sensory modality doesn’t
help much
Center for the Study of Learning and
Teaching Styles at St. John's
University
Teaching probability
Students must be forced to confront their
misconceptions directly
– Write down predictions, then compare with
results
– Students who do not explicitly make
predictions beforehand may actually rely on
misconceptions even more
Teachers need to understand probability
– Teachers who don’t feel confident about a
subject they are teaching are less likely to
correct students when they’re wrong
– Need to confront nonnormative beliefs about
probability in students and themselves
Including uncertainty in science
Environmental Science Interactive with
Ramas eLab
– Online course for AP or college level students
Simulation studies
– Antibiotic resistant TB, beak size in Darwin’s
finches
Interdisciplinary subjects
– Climate change
Online resources for teachers
– www.cdc.gov/excite
In class demonstrations
Fisher
and Richards (2004)
– Percentage of boys and girls in a
population
– Can be done with simulated data
– Students demonstrate understanding
beyond what is explained, after
discussion
– Altered problem
Age-guessing
Summary
Students
are not being taught much
about probability before college
Students hold many misconceptions
about probability
Misconceptions can be corrected if
students are forced to confront them
with data
– Simulation programs
– Hands-on activities
References
Fisher, L.A. and D. Richards. 2004. Random Walks as Motivational
Material in Introductory Statistics and Probability Courses. The
American Statistician 58, 4, 310-316.
Gelman, A. and M.E. Glickman. 2000. Some class participation
demonstrations for introductory probability and statistics. Journal
of Educational and Behavioral Statistics 25, 1, 84-100.
Hall, B. 2006. Teaching and learning uncertainty in science: the
case of climate change. Planet, 17, 48-49.
Sandoval, W.A. and K. Morrison. 2003. High School Students’
Ideas about Theory and Theory Change after a Biological Inquiry
Unit. Journal of Research in Science Teaching, 40, 4, 369-392.
Stroup, D.F., R.A. Goodman, R. Cordell, R. Scheaffer. 2004.
Teaching Statistical Principles Using Epidemiology: Measuring the
Health of Populations. The American Statistician, 58, 1, 77-84.
Wilson, Patricia S. Ed. Research Ideas for the Classroom: High
School Mathematics.MacMillan Publishing Company, New York,
1993.
http://usny.nysed.gov/teachers/nyslearningstandards.html
http://www.nctm.org/