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A writing rubric for “describe” or “explain” questions in Maths and Stats. OSEM Presented by Jeremy Brocklehurst

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Page 1: A writing rubric for “describe” or “explain” questions in Maths and Stats. Presented by Jeremy Brocklehurst

A writing rubric for “describe” or “explain” questions in Maths and Stats.

OSEM

Presented by Jeremy Brocklehurst

Page 2: A writing rubric for “describe” or “explain” questions in Maths and Stats. Presented by Jeremy Brocklehurst

*Lincoln High School

Co-educational secondary school: Y913.

15 minutes out of Christchurch.

Roll: About 1600.

School-wide focus on developing thinking (SOLO Taxonomy) since

2007. (Pam Hook: http://hooked-on-thinking.com )

Then in 2012, school wide focus on developing templates for writing.

Page 3: A writing rubric for “describe” or “explain” questions in Maths and Stats. Presented by Jeremy Brocklehurst

Success criteria for this workshop!

Page 4: A writing rubric for “describe” or “explain” questions in Maths and Stats. Presented by Jeremy Brocklehurst

Examples of describe/explain questions

Compare the performance of these 2 players over the seasons shown in the graph.

Page 5: A writing rubric for “describe” or “explain” questions in Maths and Stats. Presented by Jeremy Brocklehurst

2013 Level 2 Probability external

Compare and contrast the two distributions.

You should discuss shape, centre and spread in relation to the context.

Page 6: A writing rubric for “describe” or “explain” questions in Maths and Stats. Presented by Jeremy Brocklehurst

2014 Level 2 Probability externalDiscuss the distributions.

In your answer you should include some relevant calculations and some comparisons.

You should also discuss shape, centre and spread.

Page 7: A writing rubric for “describe” or “explain” questions in Maths and Stats. Presented by Jeremy Brocklehurst

2014 Level 2 Probability externalDiscuss the distributions.

In your answer you should include some relevant calculations and some comparisons.

You should also discuss shape, centre and spread.

Page 8: A writing rubric for “describe” or “explain” questions in Maths and Stats. Presented by Jeremy Brocklehurst

2013 L3 Probability Distributions

Page 9: A writing rubric for “describe” or “explain” questions in Maths and Stats. Presented by Jeremy Brocklehurst

2014 L3 Probability DistributionsNumber of Latte’s out of 5 made with trim

milk

Page 10: A writing rubric for “describe” or “explain” questions in Maths and Stats. Presented by Jeremy Brocklehurst

Heights of male and female students from the South African Census @ School Database

Describe features of the distributions comparatively.

Page 11: A writing rubric for “describe” or “explain” questions in Maths and Stats. Presented by Jeremy Brocklehurst

And it’s not just a Stats thing…

Page 12: A writing rubric for “describe” or “explain” questions in Maths and Stats. Presented by Jeremy Brocklehurst

In Scholarship Calculus:

From the 2012 exam:

Use calculus to explain why the simple equation models such a wide range of real world situations.

Write at most half a page.

Page 13: A writing rubric for “describe” or “explain” questions in Maths and Stats. Presented by Jeremy Brocklehurst
Page 14: A writing rubric for “describe” or “explain” questions in Maths and Stats. Presented by Jeremy Brocklehurst

Have a go at one:The following graphs are distributions of ages in two populations. The United States of America (based on US census data) and Facebook users:

Describe features of the distributions comparatively. Aim to make at least three statements. Support your statements with statistical evidence.

Page 15: A writing rubric for “describe” or “explain” questions in Maths and Stats. Presented by Jeremy Brocklehurst

Have a go at one:The following graphs are distributions of ages in two populations. The United States of America (based on US census data) and Facebook users:

Describe features of the distributions comparatively. Aim to make at least three statements. Support your statements with statistical evidence.

Page 16: A writing rubric for “describe” or “explain” questions in Maths and Stats. Presented by Jeremy Brocklehurst

Context…

Page 17: A writing rubric for “describe” or “explain” questions in Maths and Stats. Presented by Jeremy Brocklehurst

When given an “explain”, “describe” or “compare and contrast” task:

What are common difficulties that students have?

Page 18: A writing rubric for “describe” or “explain” questions in Maths and Stats. Presented by Jeremy Brocklehurst

What people said in workshops…

Page 19: A writing rubric for “describe” or “explain” questions in Maths and Stats. Presented by Jeremy Brocklehurst

When given an “explain”, “describe” or “compare and contrast” task:

What are common difficulties that students have?- Getting started.- Handling lack of information or information they don’t understand.- Confidence – fear of being wrong so I won’t try.- Not sure what statistical terms to use.- Stating what’s obvious and spelling it out.- How to back up my points using evidence from these graphs?- Comparitive language. If asked to compare the features of 2

distributions of data, students tend to describe them separately rather than comparing them.

- Talk about the graphs but no contextual links.- Write only about context – no links to statistical evidence (social

studies answer).- Having the right language/vocab – what does “compare” actually

mean I have to do? Likewise “discuss” vs “explain”.

Page 20: A writing rubric for “describe” or “explain” questions in Maths and Stats. Presented by Jeremy Brocklehurst

Writing rubrics can be useful

Page 21: A writing rubric for “describe” or “explain” questions in Maths and Stats. Presented by Jeremy Brocklehurst

What the OSEM writing frame means:

O stands for Obvious observations

Write down one thing you notice, then leave a gap, and write down something else you notice. Try to get 3 obvious things.

S is for Specific Under each obvious observation, explain what you mean so that another person would get it.

 

E is for Evidence Support each observation with numbers or calculations.

 

M is for Meaning: Make sense of it. So what? Write Write down what each of your points tells you about the original problem/situation. What else could we find out?

Page 22: A writing rubric for “describe” or “explain” questions in Maths and Stats. Presented by Jeremy Brocklehurst

What the OSEM writing frame means:

O stands for Obvious observations:

Write down one thing you notice, then leave a gap, and write down something else you notice. Try to get 3 obvious things.

S is for Specific: Under each obvious observation, explain what you mean so that another person would get it.

 

E is for Evidence: Support each observation with numbers or calculations.

 

M is for Meaning: Make sense of it. So what? Write Write down what each of your points tells you about the original problem/situation. What else could we find out?

Page 23: A writing rubric for “describe” or “explain” questions in Maths and Stats. Presented by Jeremy Brocklehurst

What the OSEM writing frame means:

O stands for Obvious observations:

Write down one thing you notice, then leave a gap, and write down something else you notice. Try to get 3 obvious things.

S is for Specific: Under each obvious observation, explain what you mean so that another person would get it.

 

E is for Evidence: Support each observation with numbers or calculations.

 

M is for Meaning: Make sense of it. So what? Write down what each of your points tells you about the original problem/situation. What else could we find out?

Page 24: A writing rubric for “describe” or “explain” questions in Maths and Stats. Presented by Jeremy Brocklehurst

What the OSEM writing frame means:

O stands for Obvious observations:

Write down one thing you notice, then leave a gap, and write down something else you notice. Try to get 3 obvious things.

S is for Specific: Under each obvious observation, explain what you mean so that another person would get it.

 

E is for Evidence: Support each observation with numbers or calculations.

 

M is for Meaning: Make sense of it. So what? Write down what each of your points tells you about the original problem/situation. What else could we find out?

Page 25: A writing rubric for “describe” or “explain” questions in Maths and Stats. Presented by Jeremy Brocklehurst

What the OSEM writing frame means:

O stands for Obvious observations:

Write down one thing you notice, then leave a gap, and write down something else you notice. Try to get 3 obvious things.

S is for Specific: Under each obvious observation, explain what you mean so that another person would get it.

 

E is for Evidence: Support each observation with numbers or calculations.

 

M is for Meaning: Make sense of it. So what?

Page 26: A writing rubric for “describe” or “explain” questions in Maths and Stats. Presented by Jeremy Brocklehurst

What the OSEM writing frame means:

O stands for Obvious observations:

Write down one thing you notice, then leave a gap, and write down something else you notice. Try to get 3 obvious things.

S is for Specific: Under each obvious observation, explain what you mean so that another person would get it.

 

E is for Evidence: Support each observation with numbers or calculations.

 

M is for Meaning: Make sense of it. So what?Write down what each of your points tells you about the problem/situation.

Page 27: A writing rubric for “describe” or “explain” questions in Maths and Stats. Presented by Jeremy Brocklehurst

What the OSEM writing frame means:

O stands for Obvious observations:

Write down one thing you notice, then leave a gap, and write down something else you notice. Try to get 3 obvious things.

S is for Specific: Under each obvious observation, explain what you mean so that another person would get it.

 

E is for Evidence: Support each observation with numbers or calculations.

 

M is for Meaning: Make sense of it. So what?Write down what each of your points tells you about the problem/situation. This is all about the context.

Page 28: A writing rubric for “describe” or “explain” questions in Maths and Stats. Presented by Jeremy Brocklehurst

M is for Meaning: Make sense of it. So what?

The “Meaning” bit has 2 aspects:

Page 29: A writing rubric for “describe” or “explain” questions in Maths and Stats. Presented by Jeremy Brocklehurst

M is for Meaning: Make sense of it. So what?

Explanations Implications

The “Meaning” bit has 2 aspects:

Page 30: A writing rubric for “describe” or “explain” questions in Maths and Stats. Presented by Jeremy Brocklehurst

M is for Meaning: Make sense of it. So what?

Explanations

The “Meaning” bit has 2 aspects:

Page 31: A writing rubric for “describe” or “explain” questions in Maths and Stats. Presented by Jeremy Brocklehurst

M is for Meaning: Make sense of it. So what?

1. Make sense of it.

The “Meaning” bit has 2 aspects:Explanations

Page 32: A writing rubric for “describe” or “explain” questions in Maths and Stats. Presented by Jeremy Brocklehurst

M is for Meaning: Make sense of it. So what?

1. Make sense of it. Explanations.

The “Meaning” bit has 2 aspects:Explanations

Page 33: A writing rubric for “describe” or “explain” questions in Maths and Stats. Presented by Jeremy Brocklehurst

M is for Meaning: Make sense of it. So what?

1. Make sense of it. Explanations.

“This makes sense because...”

Explanations

The “Meaning” bit has 2 aspects:

Page 34: A writing rubric for “describe” or “explain” questions in Maths and Stats. Presented by Jeremy Brocklehurst

M is for Meaning: Make sense of it. So what?

1. Make sense of it. Explanations.

“This makes sense because...” “This could be because…”

Explanations

The “Meaning” bit has 2 aspects:

Page 35: A writing rubric for “describe” or “explain” questions in Maths and Stats. Presented by Jeremy Brocklehurst

M is for Meaning: Make sense of it. So what?

1. Make sense of it. Explanations.

“This makes sense because...” “This could be because…” “This is surprising because…”

Explanations

The “Meaning” bit has 2 aspects:

Page 36: A writing rubric for “describe” or “explain” questions in Maths and Stats. Presented by Jeremy Brocklehurst

M is for Meaning: Make sense of it. So what?

1. Make sense of it. Explanations.

“This makes sense because...” “This could be because…” “This is surprising because…” “Another factor that could be involved here is…”

Explanations

The “Meaning” bit has 2 aspects:

Page 37: A writing rubric for “describe” or “explain” questions in Maths and Stats. Presented by Jeremy Brocklehurst

M is for Meaning: Make sense of it. So what?

1. Make sense of it. Explanations.

“This makes sense because...” “This could be because…” “This is surprising because…” “Another factor that could be involved here is…”

2. So what?

Implications

The “Meaning” bit has 2 aspects:

Page 38: A writing rubric for “describe” or “explain” questions in Maths and Stats. Presented by Jeremy Brocklehurst

M is for Meaning: Make sense of it. So what?

1. Make sense of it. Explanations.

“This makes sense because...” “This could be because…” “This is surprising because…” “Another factor that could be involved here is…”

2. So what? Implications.

The “Meaning” bit has 2 aspects:Implications

Page 39: A writing rubric for “describe” or “explain” questions in Maths and Stats. Presented by Jeremy Brocklehurst

M is for Meaning: Make sense of it. So what?

1. Make sense of it. Explanations.

“This makes sense because...” “This could be because…” “This is surprising because…” “Another factor that could be involved here is…”

2. So what? Implications.• How is this relevant to your original question? • Research – what have other studies found out about this?

How can we show “Statistical Insight” here?

The “Meaning” bit has 2 aspects:Implications

Page 40: A writing rubric for “describe” or “explain” questions in Maths and Stats. Presented by Jeremy Brocklehurst

M is for Meaning: Make sense of it. So what?

1. Make sense of it. Explanations.

“This makes sense because...” “This could be because…” “This is surprising because…” “Another factor that could be involved here is…”

2. So what? Implications.• How is this relevant to your original question? • Research – what have other studies found out about this?

Statistical Insight : Link Stats + Context and look deeper.

The “Meaning” bit has 2 aspects:Implications

Page 41: A writing rubric for “describe” or “explain” questions in Maths and Stats. Presented by Jeremy Brocklehurst

M is for Meaning: Make sense of it. So what?

1. Make sense of it. Explanations.

“This makes sense because...” “This could be because…” “This is surprising because…” “Another factor that could be involved here is…”

2. So what? Implications.• How is this relevant to your original question? • Research – what have other studies found out about this?

Statistical Insight : Link Stats + Context and look deeper.

The “Meaning” bit has 2 aspects:Implications

Explanations

Page 42: A writing rubric for “describe” or “explain” questions in Maths and Stats. Presented by Jeremy Brocklehurst

What the OSEM writing frame means:

O stands for Obvious observations:

Write down one thing you notice, then leave a gap, and write down something else you notice. Try to get 3 obvious things.

S is for Specific: Under each obvious observation, explain what you mean so that another person would get it.

 

E is for Evidence: Support each observation with numbers or calculations.

 

M is for Meaning: Make sense of it. So what?Write down what each of your points tells you about the problem/situation. This is all about the context.

Page 43: A writing rubric for “describe” or “explain” questions in Maths and Stats. Presented by Jeremy Brocklehurst

Examples of student work…

Page 44: A writing rubric for “describe” or “explain” questions in Maths and Stats. Presented by Jeremy Brocklehurst

%

Observe (look for obvious)

Page 45: A writing rubric for “describe” or “explain” questions in Maths and Stats. Presented by Jeremy Brocklehurst

%

Specific with Evidence (numbers)

Page 46: A writing rubric for “describe” or “explain” questions in Maths and Stats. Presented by Jeremy Brocklehurst

%

Meaning:

Page 47: A writing rubric for “describe” or “explain” questions in Maths and Stats. Presented by Jeremy Brocklehurst

%

Meaning: So what?

Page 48: A writing rubric for “describe” or “explain” questions in Maths and Stats. Presented by Jeremy Brocklehurst

%

Meaning: So what? What does this tell us about the situation?

Page 49: A writing rubric for “describe” or “explain” questions in Maths and Stats. Presented by Jeremy Brocklehurst

Year 9…

Page 50: A writing rubric for “describe” or “explain” questions in Maths and Stats. Presented by Jeremy Brocklehurst

Meaning- Make sense of it.- So what?

Year 10 chance investigation: Win at the Fair

Obvious observationsSpecific

Evidence (numbers, calculations)

Page 51: A writing rubric for “describe” or “explain” questions in Maths and Stats. Presented by Jeremy Brocklehurst

Year 10 chance investigation: Win at the Fair

Page 52: A writing rubric for “describe” or “explain” questions in Maths and Stats. Presented by Jeremy Brocklehurst

140

160

180

200

220

170

210

190

120

110

100

MaleFemale

130

150

MF Heights

200180160140120 170130 190

Female

110 150

Male

TallCentimetre

Height: Girls Boys Min: 120 123 LQ: 135 143.75 Med: 149.5 154 UQ: 158 168.5 Max: 245* 193

3. a) Appropriate dot plot drawn b) Appropriate box plot drawn

In the Level 1 Multivariate Data standard (1.10), my students found OSEM a useful guide when writing their conclusions:

Page 53: A writing rubric for “describe” or “explain” questions in Maths and Stats. Presented by Jeremy Brocklehurst

1.10 Multivariate – Conclusion

Page 54: A writing rubric for “describe” or “explain” questions in Maths and Stats. Presented by Jeremy Brocklehurst

1.10 Multivariate – Conclusion

Page 55: A writing rubric for “describe” or “explain” questions in Maths and Stats. Presented by Jeremy Brocklehurst

And even in Level 2 Coordinate Geometry

Page 56: A writing rubric for “describe” or “explain” questions in Maths and Stats. Presented by Jeremy Brocklehurst

And even in Level 2 Coordinate Geometry

Specific (labelling)

Evidence (calculations)

Meaning (so what?)

(Relate back to problem)

Obvious observations

Page 57: A writing rubric for “describe” or “explain” questions in Maths and Stats. Presented by Jeremy Brocklehurst

Reference for SOLO Taxonomy symbols: Pam Hook: http://hooked-on-thinking.com

Page 58: A writing rubric for “describe” or “explain” questions in Maths and Stats. Presented by Jeremy Brocklehurst
Page 59: A writing rubric for “describe” or “explain” questions in Maths and Stats. Presented by Jeremy Brocklehurst

Great resources to practice describing displays using NZ data

Wiki New Zealand website:

http://wikinewzealand.org/?cat=280

Page 60: A writing rubric for “describe” or “explain” questions in Maths and Stats. Presented by Jeremy Brocklehurst

Wiki New Zealand site:

Page 61: A writing rubric for “describe” or “explain” questions in Maths and Stats. Presented by Jeremy Brocklehurst

Wiki New Zealand site:

Page 62: A writing rubric for “describe” or “explain” questions in Maths and Stats. Presented by Jeremy Brocklehurst

Wiki New Zealand site:

Page 63: A writing rubric for “describe” or “explain” questions in Maths and Stats. Presented by Jeremy Brocklehurst
Page 64: A writing rubric for “describe” or “explain” questions in Maths and Stats. Presented by Jeremy Brocklehurst
Page 65: A writing rubric for “describe” or “explain” questions in Maths and Stats. Presented by Jeremy Brocklehurst

(a) Leaflets from us – pay a fixed amount per leaflet

(b) Leaflets delivery co. pays them per bundle of 50 leaflets.If a student delivers more than 300 leaflets they are paid more per bundle.

School students are paid to deliver weekly advertising leaflets to houses.

Page 66: A writing rubric for “describe” or “explain” questions in Maths and Stats. Presented by Jeremy Brocklehurst

In groups:

1. Each person has a sheet.

2. Each person fills in one Obvious observation.

3. Then fill in the “Specific” part for your observation

3. Continue in this way, passing

each sheet around until OSEM are completed for all 4 boxes.

4. Then have a go at the Extended Abstract part.

Page 67: A writing rubric for “describe” or “explain” questions in Maths and Stats. Presented by Jeremy Brocklehurst
Page 68: A writing rubric for “describe” or “explain” questions in Maths and Stats. Presented by Jeremy Brocklehurst

Unistructural

Obvious observations:I can identify one relevant

feature.

Multistructural

Specific with Evidence:

My description includes

specific details (e.g. locations on the scale)

AND is supported by

evidence (numbers and

units).

Relational

Meaning:I can relate my

specific observations back to the context the

graph represents.

(link – sequence, classify, compare and

contrast, explain causes, explain consequences,

analyse (part whole)).

Extended Abstract

Go somewhere with it…

I can make decisions based on the

evidenceI can predict the

effects of changes to the features.

I can adapt my observations to other situations (generalise)

(new way – generalise, evaluate, predict, and create).

Success Criteria: OSEM

Page 69: A writing rubric for “describe” or “explain” questions in Maths and Stats. Presented by Jeremy Brocklehurst

Examples of describe/explain questions

(a) Leaflets from us – pay a fixed amount per leaflet

(b) Leaflets delivery co. pays them per bundle of 50 leaflets.If a student delivers more than 300 leaflets they are paid more per bundle.

School students are paid to deliver weekly advertising leaflets to houses.

Explain how and why the graph in part (b) is different to the

graph in part (a).

Page 70: A writing rubric for “describe” or “explain” questions in Maths and Stats. Presented by Jeremy Brocklehurst

(b) Leaflets delivery co. pays them per bundle of 50 leaflets.