A MODELING APPROACH TO THE DEVELOPMENT OF STUDENTS’ INFORMAL INFERENTIAL REASONING

Authors

  • HELEN M. DOERR Syracuse University
  • ROBERT DELMAS University of Minnesota
  • KATIE MAKAR The University of Queensland

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.52041/serj.v16i2.186

Keywords:

Statistics education research, Model-based reasoning, Informal statistical inference, Model development sequences, Model eliciting activities

Abstract

Teaching from an informal statistical inference perspective can address the challenge of teaching statistics in a coherent way. We argue that activities that promote model-based reasoning address two additional challenges: providing a coherent sequence of topics and promoting the application of knowledge to novel situations. We take a models and modeling perspective as a framework for designing and implementing an instructional sequence of model development tasks focused on developing primary students’ generalized models for drawing informal inferences when comparing two sets of data. This study was conducted with 26 Year 5 students (ages 10-11). Our study provides empirical evidence for how a modeling perspective can bring together lines of research that hold potential for the teaching and learning of inferential reasoning.

First published November 2017 at Statistics Education Research Journal Archives

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Published

2017-11-30