
Maths • Year 9 • 60 • 30 students • Created with AI following Aligned with New Zealand Curriculum
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.
Lesson 2 of 5 – Visualising Data: Charts and Graphs
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])
By the end of this lesson, students will be able to:
Students are successful when they:
| Time | Activity | Purpose |
|---|---|---|
| 0–10 mins | Warm-up: Graph Hunt Mini Challenge | Activate prior knowledge |
| 10–20 mins | Explicit Teaching: Graph Types + When To Use Them | Build conceptual understanding |
| 20–30 mins | Guided Example: Frequency Table → Bar Graph | Scaffold new learning with support |
| 30–45 mins | Independent Task: Build & Justify Your Graph | Apply learning independently |
| 45–55 mins | Pair & Share: Graph Gallery Walk | Encourage peer feedback and refinement |
| 55–60 mins | Reflection & Exit Ticket | Consolidate learning & check understanding |
For Support Learners:
For Extension:
Resources: Pre-prepared visual cut-outs or slides showing various data displays (bar, pie, line, pictograph, histogram).
Instructions:
Purpose: To review and reinforce visual recognition of graph types and activate prior knowledge from Lesson 1.
Teaching Points:
Use simple real-world examples tied to Aotearoa New Zealand contexts like:
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.
Dataset: Use the frequency table created by the class in Lesson 1 – e.g., “Number of text messages sent daily by students.”
Steps:
Checkpoint Questions:
Instructions: Students choose one of:
They must:
Support Materials Available:
Teacher Role: Circulate with a checklist, noting misconceptions and successes for future planning.
Each student writes on a slip:
Collect these for formative assessment.
In Lesson 3, students will:
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.
Join thousands of teachers using Kuraplan AI to create personalized lesson plans that align with Aligned with New Zealand Curriculum in minutes, not hours.
Created with Kuraplan AI
🌟 Trusted by 1000+ Schools
Join educators across New Zealand