Construct and use back to back stem and leaf diagrams

Construct and use back to back stem and leaf diagrams
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MathsUpper Secondary (Key Stage 4)Lower Secondary (Key Stage 3)GCSE

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Construct and use back to back stem and leaf diagrams

Slide 1 - Tekstslide

Today’s Learning Goals
Title: Constructing and Using Back-to-Back Stem-and-Leaf Diagrams
Learning Goals:
“Understand how to construct a back-to-back stem-and-leaf diagram.”
“Use the diagram to effectively compare two data sets.”

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Get Started
Purpose: Engage students with a warm-up or review activity.
Slide Heading: “Get Started” or “Kick-Off Activity”
Example: Display a quick review question on data representation

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Key Concepts
Purpose: Introduce new vocabulary and core concepts for the lesson.
Slide Heading: “Key Concepts” or “What You Need to Know”
Example: Define terms like “stem,” “leaf,” and “back-to-back comparison.”

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To Know
Key Concepts:
Stem: The common “backbone” of the diagram, where the middle digits are placed.
Leaf: The individual values for each data set, listed on opposite sides of the stem.
Visual Example: Show a sample back-to-back stem-and-leaf diagram to illustrate the format.

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Teacher Demonstration (I Do)
Modeling:
Demonstrate the construction of a back-to-back stem-and-leaf diagram step-by-step.
Explain each step: identifying the stem, placing leaves in ascending order, and organizing each data set on separate sides of the stem.
Example: Use a data set (e.g., ages) to build the diagram in real-time.

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Checking for Understanding (CFU)
Quick Check:
Show a partially completed back-to-back stem-and-leaf diagram with intentional errors.
Ask students to identify and correct the mistakes (e.g., leaves out of order, incorrect stems).
Method: Use mini whiteboards or quick questions to assess if students understand the construction process.

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Guided Practice (We Do)
Activity: Lead the class in constructing a back-to-back stem-and-leaf diagram with new data.
Prompt: “Arrange each data set on either side of the stem and ensure leaves are in ascending order.”
Discussion: “What patterns do you notice? How does this representation help with comparing the two groups?”

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Independent Practice (You Do)
Task: Students create their own back-to-back stem-and-leaf diagram with two new data sets (e.g., scores from two teams).
Instructions: “Arrange the leaves in ascending order for each side. Label each data set clearly.”
Monitoring: Walk around to provide feedback and support as needed.

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Exit Ticket
Questions:
“What does each side of a back-to-back stem-and-leaf diagram represent?”
“How do you make sure data is correctly ordered?”
“How can this type of diagram help in data comparison?”
Purpose: Assess understanding and confirm that students achieved the learning goals.

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Retrieval of Knowledge
Review: Summarize the steps in constructing a back-to-back stem-and-leaf diagram.
Questions: “Why is the order of leaves important? What does the stem represent?”
Activity: Have students explain how they would use this type of diagram in a different context.

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Stamp It
Key Takeaway:
“Back-to-back stem-and-leaf diagrams make it easy to compare two data sets by aligning them around a shared stem.”
Wrap-Up Activity: Ask students to write one sentence summarizing how this diagram helps in data comparison.

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