STUDENT DESCRIPTION OF VARIATION WHILE WORKING WITH WEATHER DATA

Authors

  • CHRIS READING University of New England

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.52041/serj.v3i2.548

Keywords:

Describing variation, SOLO Taxonomy, Inference task, Secondary students

Abstract

Variation is a key concept in the study of statistics and its understanding is a crucial aspect of most statistically related tasks. This study aimed to extend and apply a hierarchy for describing students’ understanding of variation that was developed in a sampling context to the context of a natural event In which variation occurs. Students aged 13 to 17 engaged in an inference task that necessitated the description of both rainfall and temperature data. The SOLO Taxonomy was used as a framework for analyzing student responses. Two cycles of Unistructural-Multistructural-Relational levels, one for qualitative descriptions an the other for quantitative descriptions, were identified in responses. Implications of the extended hierarchy for describing understanding of variation for research, teaching ans assessment are outlined.

First published November 2004 at Statistics Education Research Journal: Archives

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Published

2004-11-29

Issue

Section

Regular Articles