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Arrange students in groups of 2. Display these statements for all to see:
Select students to read the statements. Then invite students to suggest an example for each type of study.
Use Collect and Display to create a shared reference that captures students’ developing mathematical language. Collect the language that students use to classify the studies and to determine whether the study is good or bad. Display words and phrases, such as “variable,” “influence,” “random,” “large or small group,” or “bias.”
For each pair of prompts, one partner should read the statistical question and the first study design, and the other partner should read the second. Together, sort each study design into one of the study types:
Then select which study method would provide more insight into the statistical question. Explain your reasoning.
If students have trouble determining whether a study is an experiment or not, consider asking:
“Recall the definition of an experiment. How does it differ from an observational study?”
“Experiments generally have two groups of subjects with only one variable changed between the groups. Does that describe either of the study methods you’re considering?”
The purpose of this discussion is for students to classify each study by study type, and to informally critique the design of each study.
Direct students’ attention to the reference created using Collect and Display. Ask students to share how they classified each study and whether they thought it was good or not. Invite students to borrow language from the display as needed. As they respond, update the reference to include additional phrases.
Here are some questions for discussion: