Gone Fishing: Science,
Proportions, and Probability
Sue Pawula
Summary
CCSS
and NCTM promote mathematical practices leading to reasoning and connections of
ideas to contexts outside of mathematics.
Students are led through an interactive experience where they record
fish sample data on an activity sheet and transform it to a connection between
rationalizing ratios based on the proportions they observe and connect that to
different population ratios of fish in specific ponds. Teachers should encourage them to use
precise language when describing their rationale for the relationship between
the proportions of fish from the sample to what the corresponding pond
population possibilities it could be determined to be. Further discussion should be encouraged
in other ways that students could determine correspondence between pond
population and sample sizes.
Students discover that it is difficult to determine the probability
between two pond samples without additional information. Important ideas on sampling
variability, matching proportions, and how this would be dealt with in a real
life situation are discussed as well as other strategies and concerns. Students are led to understand that
they can develop proportional reasoning without making calculations through
understanding that the proportions can be correlated through similarity
predictions. Questioning by the
teacher can lead to the basic understand of the probability continuum and lead
to differentiation of other possibilities, probabilities, and the degree of
probability. Students should
further understand how different proportions could affect ability to make
choices based on statistical data.
The second activity they participated in was to determine fish
population increase due to the research facility’s need to determined the best
conditions of increasing fish population and estimation of the current fish
population from samplings taken after time has passed. Once again students use fish samples as
a basis for the data collected.
This time they are asked to record only the number of the original fish
sample (tagged) and the new (untagged) progeny. From this they are required to use more advanced
proportional reasoning than in the previous activity and will require extra
guidance from the teacher as they work on strategies. When sharing strategies the teacher will need to carefully
allow teams with more basic strategies to share first in order for them to not
feel insecure as other groups share their more advanced strategies. Student language will use references to
part-to-part and part-to-whole and they will need to be exposed to a whole new
range of more advance strategies.
These motivating activities allow students to work through the steps
that increase their understanding of ratios, proportions, statistical
variability, and fractions.
Reflection
These
were excellent, interactive mathematical exercises for students to participate
in and see their relevance to the world around them. The creation of the graphs from which to base their
proportional predictions and the discussions that were provoked by them caused
students to think on a higher level and share with each other. This was a scenario for rich use
of mathematical language, reasoning, and strategy. Ratio creation helped student identify some proportional correlations
easily but the other more difficult relationships caused brainstorming. The second exercise brought this
activity to a higher plain in that students really had to strive and learn new
strategies to apply to be able to develop reasoning for their predictions. This was a very interesting and really
great way to get students talking.
Cochran, J. A. (2014). Gone
fishing: Science, proportions, and probability. Mathematics Teaching in the Middle School, 20(1), 16-22.
So how do diagrams for fractions compare to those for ratios? be careful as you think your way through it.
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