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Visual Data Magic

Maths • Year 9 • 60 • 30 students • Created with AI following Aligned with New Zealand Curriculum

Maths
9Year 9
60
30 students
8 June 2025

Teaching Instructions

This is lesson 2 of 5 in the unit "Statistics Skills Unlocked". Lesson Title: Visualizing Data: Charts and Graphs Lesson Description: Building on the previous lesson, students will learn how to represent data visually. The warm-up will involve identifying different types of graphs (bar, line, pie) from provided examples. Explicit teaching will focus on when to use each type of graph and how to create them. Class examples will include converting the frequency table from the previous lesson into a bar graph. For independent follow-up, students will choose a dataset and create a graph to represent it, explaining their choice of graph type.

Visual Data Magic

Unit 2: Statistics Skills Unlocked

Lesson 2 of 5 – Visualising Data: Charts and Graphs


🌱 Curriculum Alignment

Learning Area: Mathematics and Statistics
Curriculum Level: Level 4
Strand: Statistics – Statistical Investigation
Achievement Objective: Students will use appropriate displays (e.g. bar graphs, pie charts) and technology to communicate findings from statistical investigations.
([Source: New Zealand Curriculum – Mathematics & Statistics – Level 4])


🎯 Learning Intentions

By the end of this lesson, students will be able to:

  • Recognise and describe bar graphs, pie charts, and line graphs.
  • Explain when it is appropriate to use each type of graph.
  • Accurately construct a graph from a frequency table or dataset.
  • Justify their choice of graph for a given data set.

✅ Success Criteria

Students are successful when they:

  • Correctly identify different types of graphs and their features.
  • Select an appropriate graph type based on data type and context.
  • Construct a graph that is neat, accurate, and labelled.
  • Can explain why they chose their type of graph in relation to the data.

🧠 Key Competencies Practised

  • Thinking: Interpreting data and deciding how best to visually communicate it.
  • Communicating using language, symbols, and texts: Constructing graphs and explaining their function.
  • Participating and contributing: Group discussions and paired collaboration.

⏰ 60-Minute Lesson Sequence

TimeActivityPurpose
0–10 minsWarm-up: Graph Hunt Mini ChallengeActivate prior knowledge
10–20 minsExplicit Teaching: Graph Types + When To Use ThemBuild conceptual understanding
20–30 minsGuided Example: Frequency Table → Bar GraphScaffold new learning with support
30–45 minsIndependent Task: Build & Justify Your GraphApply learning independently
45–55 minsPair & Share: Graph Gallery WalkEncourage peer feedback and refinement
55–60 minsReflection & Exit TicketConsolidate learning & check understanding

🧩 Differentiation Strategy

For Support Learners:

  • Provide partially completed graph templates.
  • Allow students to use real-life datasets (e.g., favourite kai in class, weather data).

For Extension:

  • Ask students to represent the same dataset using two or more graph types and compare effectiveness.
  • Introduce “misleading graphs” and challenge them to identify flaws.

🧑‍🏫 Detailed Lesson Breakdown


🔍 Warm-Up: Graph Hunt Mini Challenge (0–10 mins)

Resources: Pre-prepared visual cut-outs or slides showing various data displays (bar, pie, line, pictograph, histogram).

Instructions:

  • Hand out a “Graph Bingo” grid containing a mix of correctly and incorrectly labelled graphs.
  • In pairs, students race to tick off or correct six graphs by identifying their type and potential use.

Purpose: To review and reinforce visual recognition of graph types and activate prior knowledge from Lesson 1.


👩‍🏫 Explicit Teaching (10–20 mins): Graph Types Overview

Teaching Points:

  • Bar Graphs: Show frequency of categories.
  • Line Graphs: Show change over time.
  • Pie Charts: Show proportion in a whole.

Use simple real-world examples tied to Aotearoa New Zealand contexts like:

  • Bar graph: Number of native vs introduced birds in regions.
  • Line graph: Average rainfall in months across Whanganui.
  • Pie chart: Students’ preferred kapa haka components.

Include ‘When & Why’ cues:
E.g., “If your data compares categories, you’re probably using a bar graph.”

Visual Aid: A “Graph Choice Tree” diagram students can paste into their books.


📝 Guided Example (20–30 mins)

Dataset: Use the frequency table created by the class in Lesson 1 – e.g., “Number of text messages sent daily by students.”

Steps:

  1. Model converting the table into a bar graph on the board, labelling axes and giving a title.
  2. Student pairs replicate graph creation in their books or on grid paper.

Checkpoint Questions:

  • What type of data are we showing?
  • Why is a bar graph the best fit?

👨‍🎓 Independent Task: Build & Justify Your Graph (30–45 mins)

Instructions: Students choose one of:

  • A small dataset provided (e.g., Class sport preferences, Whānau house points, NZ climate facts)
  • Their own collected data from home or a school survey (optional task from Lesson 1)

They must:

  1. Decide the best graph type.
  2. Construct the graph neatly using ruler and colour (paper or digital format).
  3. Write a 2–3 sentence justification: “I chose a ___ graph because…”

Support Materials Available:

  • Graph paper
  • Rulers & coloured pencils
  • Slide template if using devices

🖼️ Pair & Share: Graph Gallery Walk (45–55 mins)

  • Students set up their graphs on tables or devices.
  • Walk around in pairs, leaving one “Glow” (positive) and one “Grow” (improvement suggestion) sticky note on two peer graphs.

Teacher Role: Circulate with a checklist, noting misconceptions and successes for future planning.


📝 Exit Ticket (55–60 mins)

Each student writes on a slip:

  1. One thing they learnt about graph types.
  2. One thing they’re still unsure about.

Collect these for formative assessment.


🗂️ Resources Required

  • “Graph Bingo” handouts
  • A3 grid paper or devices with Google Sheets
  • Rulers, pencils, and coloured markers
  • Pre-sorted mini-datasets (hardcopy or digital)
  • Sticky notes for peer feedback
  • “Graph Choice Tree” visual guide

🧭 Cross-Curricular Links

  • Social Studies: Represent migration patterns or iwi population changes.
  • English: Justify graph choice in persuasive writing format.
  • Science: Understand real-world data from climate widgets or classroom experiments.

📚 Assessment Opportunities

  • Formative: Participation in warm-up and class discussion
  • Diagnostic: Exit ticket responses and justification of graph choice
  • Summative: Quality and accuracy of constructed graph (linked to future assignment in Lesson 5)

🌿 Future-Facing Follow-Up

In Lesson 3, students will:

  • Begin interpreting graphs and drawing conclusions
  • Explore misleading graphs and media manipulation
  • Use digital tools to create interactive graphs

This lesson embodies differentiated, real-world learning grounded in the New Zealand Curriculum, enabling students to explore data in ways that are both visual and meaningful. Graphing isn’t just about numbers—it’s about storytelling.

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