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Standard detail

Depth 2Parent ID: D1AB8AA45EA446909E05D8607F0324D4Standard set: Level 1B: Grades 3-5 (Ages 8-11)

Original statement

Raw data has little meaning on its own. Data is often sorted or grouped to provide additional clarity. Organizing data can make interpreting and communicating it to others easier. Data points can be clustered by a number of commonalities. The same data could be manipulated in different ways to emphasize particular aspects or parts of the data set. For example, students could create and administer electronic surveys to their classmates. Possible topics could include favorite books, family heritage, and after school activities. Students could then create digital displays of the data they have collected such as column histogram charts showing the percent of respondents in each grade who selected a particular favorite book. Finally, students could make quantitative statements supported by the data such as which books are more appealing to specific ages of students. As an extension, students could write an opinion piece stating a claim and supporting it with evidence from the data they collected. (CA CCSS for Mathematics 3.MD.3, 4.MD.4, 5.MD.2) (CA CCSS for ELA/Literacy W.3.1, W.4.1, W.5.1) Alternatively, students could represent data in tables and graphical displays to describe weather experienced in the last several years. They could select the type of graphical display based on the specific data represented (e.g., daily high/low temperatures on a scatter plot, average temperatures for a month across years in a column chart). Students could then make a claim about expected weather in future months based on the data. (CA NGSS: 3-ESS2-1)

Quick facts

Statement code
Standard ID
375205E63DA048AA81839EC51912A1FE
Subject
Computer Science
Grades
03, 04, 05
Ancestor IDs
D1AB8AA45EA446909E05D8607F0324D4
43E06FE022C7452E81A18319C5E259CD
· Level 1B: Grades 3-5 (Ages 8-11) · Unity Concord International School · Checkfu