Chocs and Blocks statistical sampling activity Year First YearType Guided activity, LectureTopic Mathematics and statistics, StatisticsAttribution The University of MelbourneDate Aug 2021Summary Chocs and Blocks is an in-class statistical sampling activity involving chocolate. Links View Resource About this resource Description Chocs and Blocks is an in-class sampling activity designed to provide an experiential foundation upon which students can build understandings of sampling and sampling bias, sampling variability and estimation, sampling distributions and other key statistical concepts. Length Less than 1 hr. Pedagogical backing Rationale Carefully designed sequences of activities can help students improve their reasoning and understanding in statistics (Garfield & Ben-Zvi, 2007). Several principles of mathematical task design apply to this activity, such as offering multiple entry and exit points, approaching the unknown from what is known to the students (Ahmed, 1987) and offering the potential for mathematically (or statistically) fruitful activity (Mason & Johnston-Wilder, 2006; Gunn, 2011). How is the resource used An interactive lecture activity, held in a large lecture theatre or a computer lab classroom, over a 50-minute class. Student evaluation This activity has been run with students for over 20 years, originally in an offline format and more recently using this online version. The suggested structure of the activity as described in the teaching notes is based on years of refinement and improvement. We run it each year with lecture classes of 150-200 first-year statistics students. Authors Sharon Gunn and Anthony Morphett (a.morphett@unimelb.edu.au) Chocs and Blocks is based on an earlier activity by Professor Nye John and Dr David Whittaker from the University of Waikato at the end of the last century. The Chocs and Blocks webpage was designed by Sharon Gunn and Anthony Morphett and developed by The University of Melbourne’s Learning Environments and Anthony Morphett, with financial support from the School of Mathematics and Statistics. An earlier Chocs and Blocks website was developed by Russell Jenkins. The Chocs and Blocks setup program was developed by Anthony Morphett. The documentation for teachers was written by Sharon Gunn and Anthony Morphett. Leave a comment Leave a Reply Cancel replyYou must be logged in to post a comment. Post navigation ← Learning chemistry using web-based interaction Conceptual Learning with Interactive Applets →