Displaying Data: Histograms and Stem-and-Leaf Plots
Students construct and interpret histograms and stem-and-leaf plots to represent continuous data.
Key Questions
- How do histograms and stem-and-leaf plots effectively display continuous data?
- Explain the difference between a column graph and a histogram.
- Design a stem-and-leaf plot for a given set of numerical data.
ACARA Content Descriptions
About This Topic
Art Around Us encourages Foundation students to recognize that art isn't just found in museums, it's everywhere in our daily lives. From the statues in the park and the murals on the street to the design of their school playground and the patterns on their clothes, art is a constant presence. In the Australian Curriculum, this topic helps students connect their classroom learning to the 'real world' and their local community.
Students explore the purpose of public art: Is it to tell a story? To make a place look beautiful? To remember someone important? They also learn about the different people who make this art, including local community members and First Nations artists. This topic comes alive when students can go on 'art walks' around their school or local area, physically interacting with public works and discussing their impact on the environment with their peers.
Active Learning Ideas
Inquiry Circle: The School Art Hunt
Students go on a walk around the school in small groups to find 'hidden art' (e.g., a colorful tile, a carved bench, a garden design). They take a photo or draw a sketch of their favorite find to share with the class.
Think-Pair-Share: Why is it There?
Show a picture of a famous Australian public artwork (like the 'Big Merino' or a city mural). Students discuss with a partner why someone would put art in that specific spot and who they think it was made for.
Simulation Game: The Park Designers
In small groups, students use blocks or recycled materials to design a 'mini-park.' They must decide where to put one piece of 'art' (like a statue or a fountain) so that everyone who visits the park can enjoy it.
Watch Out for These Misconceptions
Common MisconceptionArt is only things that are in frames.
What to Teach Instead
Students often have a very narrow definition of art. Use an 'art hunt' to point out sculptures, architecture, and even well-designed signs to help them see that art and design are all around them.
Common MisconceptionPublic art is just 'decoration.'
What to Teach Instead
Children may not realize that art can have a job, like telling the history of a place. Show examples of memorials or Indigenous 'Welcome to Country' markers to show how art can carry important messages.
Suggested Methodologies
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Frequently Asked Questions
What are the best hands-on strategies for teaching about art in the community?
How can I find public art near my school?
How do I explain 'vandalism' vs. 'street art' to young children?
Why should we talk about the 'purpose' of public art?
Planning templates for Mathematics
5E Model
The 5E Model structures lessons through five phases (Engage, Explore, Explain, Elaborate, and Evaluate), guiding students from curiosity to deep understanding through inquiry-based learning.
unit plannerMath Unit
Plan a multi-week math unit with conceptual coherence: from building number sense and procedural fluency to applying skills in context and developing mathematical reasoning across a connected sequence of lessons.
rubricMath Rubric
Build a math rubric that assesses problem-solving, mathematical reasoning, and communication alongside procedural accuracy, giving students feedback on how they think, not just whether they got the right answer.
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