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Dice Rolling and Probability

Students will utilize the Spreadsheet and Data and Statistics applications in the TI-Nspire handheld. They will create randomly generated data and will plot it in a Dot Plot to recognize relative frequency of outcomes.
https://education.ti.com/en/activity/detail/dice-rolling-and-probability

One Year Makes a Difference

This lesson involves drawing informal comparative inferences about two populations.
https://education.ti.com/en/activity/detail/one-year-makes-a-difference

Angles for a Solution

This lesson involves looking at several sketches of intersecting lines and determining the measures of the missing angles using the facts about supplementary, complementary, vertical, and adjacent angles.
https://education.ti.com/en/activity/detail/angles-for-a-solution

Box Plot Comparison

In this activity, students will create dot plots and box-and-whisker plots of the temperatures of three different cities along the United States' East Coast: Caribou, Maine, Washington, DC, and Tampa, Florida. Students will make dot plots for each city and compare the representations to one ano...
https://education.ti.com/en/activity/detail/box-plot-comparison

Helping students learn how to use built-in functions on the TI nspire

Students will follow step-by-step directions to become familiar with how to use the TI nspire's built in functions. Tutorial includes converting to decimal, approximating fractions, finding remainders, finding LCM, using factorials, creating mixed numbers, and factoring numbers to their prime fac...
https://education.ti.com/en/activity/detail/helping-students-learn-how-to-use-builtin-functions-on-the-ti-nspire

Composite Rectangular Figures

Students will find the perimeter and area of a composite rectangular figure. They will explain how to find the measures (lengths) of unknown sides as well as the area of the entire polygon by dividing the figure into smaller rectangular figures.
https://education.ti.com/en/activity/detail/composite-rectangular-figures

Examining Patterens in a Table, Function Rule, and Graphs

In this activity, students will identify characteristics of proportional and non-proportional linear relationships by examining patterns in a table, function rules, and a graph. Students will distinguish between proportional and non-proportional relationships by comparing patterns in table, funct...
https://education.ti.com/en/activity/detail/examining-patterens-in-a-table-function-rule-and-graphs

F Distribution

Students study the characteristics of the F distribution and discuss why the distribution is not symmetric (skewed right) and only has positive values. Students then use the Fcdf command to find probabilities and to confirm percentiles. They move on to find critical values and then compute a conf...
https://education.ti.com/en/activity/detail/f-distribution_1

The Integrated Medical Model

As NASA is designing a new spacecraft capable of taking humans into deep space, and with the future advent of commercial spaceflight, a deeper and better understanding of medical risk has become even more vital for maintaining spaceflight safety and health for humans.
https://education.ti.com/en/activity/detail/the-integrated-medical-model

Sampling

Students learn about each of the four types of random sampling methods and use the randInt command to find each kind of sample from a given population.
https://education.ti.com/en/activity/detail/sampling_1

Testing Claims About Proportions

Students find z-scores and critical values to test claims about proportions. To verify the results, they find P-values by either finding the area under the curve with the Integral tool, or by using the 1-Prop z Test command.
https://education.ti.com/en/activity/detail/testing-claims-about-proportions_1

Z-Scores

This lesson involves finding the area under the standard normal curve with mean 0 and standard deviation 1 for a given distance from the mean and compare this to the area under the curve for another member of the family of normal curves.
https://education.ti.com/en/activity/detail/zscores

Square it Up!

Students investigate the method of least squares by adding the squares to a scatter plot and moving a line to find the minimum sum. Then they compare their line to the built-in linear regression model.
https://education.ti.com/en/activity/detail/square-it-up

Linear Inequalities

Students first look at tables of values to see that inequalities are true for some values of the variable and not for others. They then graph simple inequalities, comparing the handheld output with graphs they create on paper. The last two problems have students solve one-step linear inequalities...
https://education.ti.com/en/activity/detail/linear-inequalities

Candy Pieces

Students will be introduce to hypothesis testing. Students are given the number of pieces by color in a bag of candy. They are asked if they think the bag could have come from a manufacturing process designed to produce equal proportions of each color. They will then use a chi-square test for goo...
https://education.ti.com/en/activity/detail/candy-pieces_1

Chi-Square Distributions

Students compare the Chi-Square distribution to the standard normal distribution and determine how the Chi-Square distribution changes as they increase the degrees of freedom.
https://education.ti.com/en/activity/detail/chisquare-distributions_1

Comparing Prices

Students will compare average U.S. gasoline prices per gallon for two years. Then they will use the mean and standard deviation (SD) and the median and interquartile range (IQR) to measure the center and spread of price data.
https://education.ti.com/en/activity/detail/comparing-prices

Cancer Clusters

Students will investigate cancer incidence rates in a number of states. Hypothesis testing is introduced and used along with a two-proportion z-test to compare cancer rates. This activity helps students to determine when a difference in data is actually statistically significant. This should enco...
https://education.ti.com/en/activity/detail/cancer-clusters

Move Those Chains

In this activity, students will explore the Chain Rule. Students are asked to make a conjecture of the derivative of f(x) = (2x + 1)2 based on the Power Rule. They are then asked to graph their derivative function and compare it to the graph of f´(x). They will then examine "true" statements abou...
https://education.ti.com/en/activity/detail/move-those-chains

Complex Roots: A Graphical Solution

In this activity, you will explore the relationship between the complex roots of a quadratic equation and the related parabola's graph.
https://education.ti.com/en/activity/detail/complex-roots-a-graphical-solution

But What Do You Mean?

In this activity, students learn about the concept of mean or average, in addition to learning several ways to find the mean on the TI-Nspire handheld (including using a spreadsheet and the mean command). Students also use these methods to find the mean when given the frequencies of each number i...
https://education.ti.com/en/activity/detail/but-what-do-you-mean

The Derivatives of Logs

Students will use the Chain Rule to find the derivative of more complex exponential and logarithmic functions.
https://education.ti.com/en/activity/detail/the-derivatives-of-logs

Exploring Complex Roots

In this activity, you will explore the relationship between the complex roots of a quadratic equation and the related parabola's graph. Open the file CollegeAlg_ComplexRoots.tns on your TI-Nspire handheld device to work through the activity.
https://education.ti.com/en/activity/detail/exploring-complex-roots

Difference Between Two Proportions

Students use confidence intervals to estimate the difference of two population proportions. First they find the intervals by calculating the critical value and the margin of error. Then, they use the 2-propZInterval command. Students find confidence intervals for differences in proportions in rea...
https://education.ti.com/en/activity/detail/difference-between-two-proportions_1

Graphs of Polynomial Functions

The activity begins by having students compare functions to introduce the concept of end behavior. Then they graph cubics and quartics, noting the respective end behaviors for positive and negative leading coefficients. Finally, they compare quadratics to quartics and cubics to quintics to discov...
https://education.ti.com/en/activity/detail/graphs-of-polynomial-functions