Post #6
In the following probability activity, students will have the opportunity to explore intersections, unions, and complements using Venn diagrams. This covers the New York State Standard HSS.CP.A.1: "Describe events as subsets of a sample space (the set of outcomes) using characteristics (or categories) of the outcomes, or as unions, intersections, or complements of other events ("or," "and," "not")."
My goal for this activity is to use visuals to support logical thinking. Venn diagrams are a strong visual that can help students understand relationships between sets. These graphic organize can help students solve real-world problems and understand more abstract logic skills.
Students will be expected to have knowledge of how a Venn diagram works before this lesson.
Students will receive a word bank containing the following words:
- Snow
- Ice
- Christmas
- Valentine's Day
- Easter
- Thanksgiving
- Hot Chocolate
- New Year's Day
- Snowman
- Candy canes
- Blizzard
- The definition of intersection directly relates to the visual. The set of the intersection of holidays and things related to winter are the items listed in the intersection of the two circles. This relates to the word AND. The items have to be holidays AND related to winter.
- The definition of union has to do with the word OR. The set of the union of holidays and things related to winter can be any holiday OR anything related to winter. It has to fall into at least one of those categories. So, everything listed throughout the Venn diagram is included.
- Finally, complements include items that are only ever listed in one category. It can be thought of things that are not in the category. The complement of things related to winter includes just Easter and Thanksgiving. The complement of Holidays is snow, ice, hot chocolate, snowman, candy canes, and blizzard.
I love the idea of having an entirely non-mathematical Venn diagram to introduce these concepts. I would definitely use this in my class if I ever teach Stats/Probability. I also like this teaching philosophy in general, similar to how you asked your students to draw the trajectory of a slingshot before doing a deeper dive into parabolas/quadratics. I think the intuition behind math is so often forgotten, so I appreciate your post. Nice job!
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