Interpreting Tables

Contributor: Danielle Childers. Lesson ID: 10058

What do pants and tables have to do with math? You will use them to learn how to keep track of numerical information and make it easier to understand. Make and interpret tables and charts!

categories

Measurement and Data, Statistics, Statistics and Probability

subject
Math
learning style
Visual
personality style
Otter, Beaver
Grade Level
Primary (K-2)
Lesson Type
Quick Query

Lesson Plan - Get It!

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  • Are you ready to go on a scavenger hunt?

I hope so! Grab a piece of paper and a pencil. Head to your bedroom and count the number of pants (or shorts) you have.

  • Does this seem like a weird scavenger hunt?

Keep reading!

On a piece of paper, write your name and how many pants you have.

Keep hunting around the house to find how many pants all the other members of your family have. Write each of their names and how many they have.

  • Do you dare to hunt in the dirty laundry?

Now that you have all the information, called data, you are going to make a table. Not a table you eat on, but a math table.

A math table helps make all the information you have clear and easy to understand.

  1. Print out the Table Template from Downloadable Resources in the right-hand sidebar.
  1. On the top, write the title so people know what they will learn about when they see it.
  1. You also need to name each column.
  1. On left side, you will write everyone’s name, so title it "Name."
  1. On the right side, title it "How Many?"
  1. Write everyone’s name on the left side. On the right side, write how many pants they have.
  1. Look at your table to answer these questions.
  • Who has the most pants?
  • Who has the least?
  • What is the difference between how many pants you have and what your mom or dad has?

Continue to the Got It? section to play an online game and learn to make a graph.

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