Rebuild statistics & Data
Move from model to strategy to independent proof using mean / median, range & mad, dot plots, and histograms.
Ask statistical questions and summarize data with center, spread, and graphs — making sense of numbers.
Learning objective
I can write statistical questions and find and compare the mean, median, mode, range, and mean absolute deviation of a data set, and read dot plots, histograms, and box plots.
How can I model, solve, and explain statistics & Data so another student understands my thinking?
Understand the situation, represent it, choose the strategy, then prove the answer.
Score 80% or higher, correct one missed item in Smart Review, and write a complete explanation using at least one vocabulary word.
Move from model to strategy to independent proof using mean / median, range & mad, dot plots, and histograms.
Students can represent the idea, solve accurately, and justify why the answer makes sense.
Look for accurate use of mean / median, range & mad, dot plots, and histograms and a clear explanation.
Before students chase speed, they build the whole idea. Use this as the opening map for a small group, tutoring block, or independent recovery path.
The big idea: Statistics & Data is about choosing a representation, keeping quantities organized, and defending the strategy.
Students identify what is known, what is unknown, and which vocabulary from statistics & Data matters.
Represent statistics & Data with a visual model, a table, and an equation.
Students connect the model to mean / median, range & mad, dot plots, and histograms and explain why that tool fits.
Students use the discourse frame, check for the likely misconception, and revise the written explanation.
Open with the larger concept before students touch the practice set: What does the situation mean, what model fits it, and how will we know the answer is reasonable?
How do mathematicians use mean / median, range & mad, dot plots, and histograms to make sense of real problems and defend an answer?
Students preview mean / median, range & mad, dot plots, and histograms with one low-floor problem, one model, and one vocabulary check.
Represent statistics & Data with a visual model, a table, and an equation.
Students complete the frame: "My strategy works because ___."
Ask students to create a new problem that uses the same structure.
Represent statistics & Data with a visual model, a table, and an equation.
My strategy works because ___.
Ask students to create a new problem that uses the same structure.
Teach the big idea first, then open one mini-lesson at a time. Each mini-lesson has a narrow objective, one teacher move, one model, practice, an error to catch, and evidence to collect.
I can explain what mean / median means before I calculate.
I can use range & MAD as one part of solving statistics & Data problems.
I can use dot plots as one part of solving statistics & Data problems.
I can use histograms as one part of solving statistics & Data problems.
Students should not experience these as separate activities. Each mini-lesson adds one piece to the same concept spine: understand, represent, strategize, and prove.
This is the teacher-ready pacing model for intervention blocks, tutoring, pull-out groups, or independent catch-up work.
Use the pre-quiz and diagnostic score to select the right route without lowering the grade-level expectation.
Teacher-led model, manipulatives, read-aloud question support, Worksheet A odd items, then one Smart Review item.
Concept Lab, worked examples, Practice, Error Clinic, Worksheet A/B mix, and an exit ticket conference.
Worksheet B challenge, performance task, student-created example, and peer teaching using the discourse frame.
Study these three examples — easy to challenge — then head to Practice.
Find the mean of 4, 8, 6, 2, and 5.
Find the median of 7, 3, 9, 5, 3, and 11.
Find the mean absolute deviation (MAD) of 5, 8, 8, 11, and 13.
Six quick questions. We'll tell you whether to skip ahead or dig in.
Ten questions, self-checking. Aim for 80%+, then try the game.
Tap a falling tile — or press number keys 1–4 — to match the problem. Five lives — how high can you climb?
Use this as a quick conference script after a missed diagnostic, a worksheet error, or a low post-quiz score.
Students may answer procedurally without explaining why the method works for statistics & Data.
Look for accurate use of mean / median, range & mad, dot plots, and histograms and a clear explanation.
Can I show the problem with a model, name the operation or relationship, and explain why my answer is reasonable?
Students apply statistics & Data in a short constructed-response task. This gives publishers, teachers, and families evidence beyond multiple choice.
Create a realistic situation where someone must use mean / median, range & mad, dot plots, and histograms. Solve it two ways: first with a model or diagram, then with numbers or symbols. Finish by explaining why the answer is reasonable.
| 4 · Publishes math thinking | Accurate answer, efficient strategy, clear model, complete explanation, and correct vocabulary. |
|---|---|
| 3 · Meets standard | Accurate answer and a mostly clear strategy with enough explanation to follow the thinking. |
| 2 · Developing | Partially correct work; model or explanation shows a gap that can be repaired with feedback. |
| 1 · Needs reteach | Misconception is still present; student needs a concrete model and a smaller parallel problem. |
Answer as many as you can before the clock runs out — speed plus accuracy builds automaticity.
Tap a card to flip it. Use 🔊 to hear the word and meaning.
Quick check — answer all four before you leave.
How do mathematicians use mean / median, range & mad, dot plots, and histograms to make sense of real problems and defend an answer?
| Mini-Lesson 1: Mean / median | I can explain what mean / median means before I calculate. | Annotated model and one accurate independent item. |
|---|---|---|
| Mini-Lesson 2: Range & MAD | I can use range & MAD as one part of solving statistics & Data problems. | Annotated model and one accurate independent item. |
| Mini-Lesson 3: Dot plots | I can use dot plots as one part of solving statistics & Data problems. | Annotated model and one accurate independent item. |
| Mini-Lesson 4: Histograms | I can use histograms as one part of solving statistics & Data problems. | Exit ticket plus revised explanation. |
Task: Create and solve a realistic situation that uses mean / median, range & mad, dot plots, and histograms. Show a model, solve with numbers, and explain why the answer is reasonable.
| 4 · Publishes math thinking | Accurate answer, efficient strategy, clear model, complete explanation, and correct vocabulary. |
|---|---|
| 3 · Meets standard | Accurate answer and a mostly clear strategy with enough explanation to follow the thinking. |
| 2 · Developing | Partially correct work; model or explanation shows a gap that can be repaired with feedback. |
| 1 · Needs reteach | Misconception is still present; student needs a concrete model and a smaller parallel problem. |
Dear Family,
This week your student is working on statistics & data. The goal is: I can write statistical questions and find and compare the mean, median, mode, range, and mean absolute deviation of a data set, and read dot plots, histograms, and box plots.
Words to know at home:
How to help: ask your student to teach you one example out loud, look for these ideas in everyday life (shopping, cooking, time, money), and praise effort and clear explanations — not just right answers.
Thank you for supporting math at home!
— Mr. Neft
Assign the pre-quiz before the station and the post-quiz after. Each comes in a student version and a teacher (auto-graded) version.
Quiz links are wired from assets/forms-links.js once the Google
Forms are generated (see scripts/intervention/forms.gs).
Check each box when you can do it on your own.
Level 1 (support): use the Materials manipulatives, study the worked examples, and work one step at a time.
Level 2 (stretch): finish the ★ challenge on Worksheet B and explain your reasoning in words.
Preteach the key vocabulary, then ask students to use it in a complete sentence.
Talk frame: My strategy works because ___.
Talk-Write-Revise: say the strategy with a partner, write one complete explanation, then revise it with a vocabulary word.