[Informatics] Another good example of a SAT-like process to show your students

Christophersen, Paula P christophersen.paula.p at edumail.vic.gov.au
Wed Dec 23 20:25:51 AEDT 2015


Thanks Lucas for this information - great ideas for approaching the SAT.

Regards
Paula
________________________________________
From: informatics-bounces at edulists.com.au [informatics-bounces at edulists.com.au] on behalf of Garth, Lucas A [garth.lucas.a at edumail.vic.gov.au]
Sent: Wednesday, 23 December 2015 6:21 PM
To: Year 12 VCE Informatics Teachers' Mailing List
Subject: [Informatics] Another good example of a SAT-like process to show       your students

Hi all,
Found a link to this on my Twitter feed today and think it was worth a share.  Given it's NBA related I think quite a few students might like to see this as an example and drill deeper into the data as preparation for or alongside their U3O2 analysis in the SAT.

http://www.datasciencecentral.com/m/blogpost?id=6448529%3ABlogPost%3A308162

In this particular link, the writer (Divya Parmar) shows the process of data analysis:

1 - find a question you want the answer to (in his case he uses an example of NBA star Stephen Curry returning to form in last year's NBA playoffs)

2 -  gather data to provide insight (here he shows the main source for the data and using in a CSV file, something we'd all be familiar with)

3 - analyse your data using software of choice (here he highlights Excel for starters, but then to R due to the capacity to loop and gather data quickly)

4 - look at your analysis and apply what you've learned (here he shows that Curry would return to strong form - and blow me down he does)

For the SAT U3O2 component, it would be job done.  And if not it'd only be trying to gather more data on his previous season's performances (unsure if really relevant - something worth discussion) and a poll would have been useful for primary sourced data (can't be done in retrospect obviously).
A U4O1 would appear need some multimedia of Curry in games struggling then dominating, some smashing graphs, some handy HTML/CSS page organisation, Harvard style referencing and the final analysis (from U3O2) attached in written form.

OK - you get the gist, hope it helps someone.

Have a great Christmas everyone

Lucas (from Lalor)
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