Queue for the loo. Up to 160 people might have shared a single toilet in a workers’ housing block...

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Queue for the loo. Up to 160 people might have shared a single toilet in a workers’ housing block in Merthyr Tydfil in 1850. If everybody spent 2 minutes in the toilet each morning and you had to leave for work by 8 a.m. what time would you need to start queuing to ensure that you left for work on time?

Transcript of Queue for the loo. Up to 160 people might have shared a single toilet in a workers’ housing block...

Page 1: Queue for the loo. Up to 160 people might have shared a single toilet in a workers’ housing block in Merthyr Tydfil in 1850. If everybody spent 2 minutes.

Queue for the loo.

Up to 160 people might have shared a single toilet in a workers’ housing block in Merthyr Tydfil in 1850. If everybody spent 2 minutes in the toilet each morning and you had to leave for work by 8 a.m. what time would you need to start queuing to ensure that you left for work on time?

Page 2: Queue for the loo. Up to 160 people might have shared a single toilet in a workers’ housing block in Merthyr Tydfil in 1850. If everybody spent 2 minutes.

Queue for the loo.

160 x 2 = 320 minutesThat’s 5 hours 20 minutesYou’d need to get up and start queuing at 2.40 a.m.

Page 3: Queue for the loo. Up to 160 people might have shared a single toilet in a workers’ housing block in Merthyr Tydfil in 1850. If everybody spent 2 minutes.

NUMERACY in

HISTORY

Page 4: Queue for the loo. Up to 160 people might have shared a single toilet in a workers’ housing block in Merthyr Tydfil in 1850. If everybody spent 2 minutes.

The aim of the National Numeracy Strategy for KS3 is to…

•Improve accuracy in calculation, measurement and graphical work.

•Improve interpretation and presentation of graphs, charts and diagrams.

•Improve reasoning and problem solving.

Page 5: Queue for the loo. Up to 160 people might have shared a single toilet in a workers’ housing block in Merthyr Tydfil in 1850. If everybody spent 2 minutes.

But what is our aim for numeracy in history?

•Improve ability to place events and objects in chronological order.

•Improve interpretation and presentation of graphs, charts and diagrams.

•Improve interpretation of data.

Page 6: Queue for the loo. Up to 160 people might have shared a single toilet in a workers’ housing block in Merthyr Tydfil in 1850. If everybody spent 2 minutes.

Some Practical Strategies:

Starters and Plenaries. Use Excel. Create and use a database. Encourage calculations in diagrams. Use on-line sources of data.

(www.learningcurve.pro.gov.uk) Encourage use of correct

terminology. Chronology – get in the habit of

constantly checking. Quantifiable and unquantifiable

information.Introduce the usefulness AND the

limitations of data and statistics.

Page 7: Queue for the loo. Up to 160 people might have shared a single toilet in a workers’ housing block in Merthyr Tydfil in 1850. If everybody spent 2 minutes.

Pupils can use the Domesday database to compare data from different regions and present their findings using graphs and/or tables.

Pupils use census data to collect, process, present and interpret data in order to draw conclusions on the similarities and differences between the occupations, wages and weekly budgets of middle-class families locally and nationally.

Pupils can collect, process, present and interpret data gathered from war memorials using a variety of techniques including graphs, charts and tables.

Pupils research geometry and symmetry of Islamic patterns, the use of zero and the work of al-Khwarizmi (Arab mathematician 780-850).

Page 8: Queue for the loo. Up to 160 people might have shared a single toilet in a workers’ housing block in Merthyr Tydfil in 1850. If everybody spent 2 minutes.

To keep a mentally ill person costs approximately 4 RM per day, and there are

300,000 mentally ill in care.

a. How much do these people cost to keep in total?

b. How many marriage loans at 1000RM each could be granted from this money?

Page 9: Queue for the loo. Up to 160 people might have shared a single toilet in a workers’ housing block in Merthyr Tydfil in 1850. If everybody spent 2 minutes.

Hitler had a membership Hitler had a membership card for the National card for the National Socialist Party. His Socialist Party. His

membership card was membership card was number 555. number 555.

How many people were How many people were members of the Party before members of the Party before

Hitler?Hitler?

Page 10: Queue for the loo. Up to 160 people might have shared a single toilet in a workers’ housing block in Merthyr Tydfil in 1850. If everybody spent 2 minutes.

YORK

BORDEAUX

It was important for kings to visit all parts of the Empire. If they could travel 50km a day on horseback, how long would it take for a medieval king to travel from York to Bordeaux?

850km

Try and solve this medieval problem…

Part of the English Empire

Key:

Page 11: Queue for the loo. Up to 160 people might have shared a single toilet in a workers’ housing block in Merthyr Tydfil in 1850. If everybody spent 2 minutes.

Dealing with chronology…

1066

The years 0 – 99 BC were in the 1st century

The years 100-199 BC were in the 2nd century

Page 12: Queue for the loo. Up to 160 people might have shared a single toilet in a workers’ housing block in Merthyr Tydfil in 1850. If everybody spent 2 minutes.

FACT:

In 2006 the population of England was 46 times

what it was in 1066.

What might we assume from this fact?

What else do we need to know?

Page 13: Queue for the loo. Up to 160 people might have shared a single toilet in a workers’ housing block in Merthyr Tydfil in 1850. If everybody spent 2 minutes.

1066 – 1,100,000

1215 – 2,500,000

1350 – 2,500,000

1801 – 8,308,000

1841 – 14,866,000

1881 - 24,402,700

1921 – 35,230,200

2006– 50,690,000

The population of the United Kingdom:

What does this tell us?

What doesn’t it tell us?

Page 14: Queue for the loo. Up to 160 people might have shared a single toilet in a workers’ housing block in Merthyr Tydfil in 1850. If everybody spent 2 minutes.

PROBLEMS WITH PROBLEMS WITH NUMERACY IN HISTORY! NUMERACY IN HISTORY!

Chances are your history class will be extremely mixed ability when it comes to mathematical skills.

Therefore the golden rulesgolden rules are:

• keep actual mathematical problems to a minimum – starters only? calculators always allowed

• when using data put pupils into pairs or groups

• always model an answer first

• try to only use one type of data at a time.

• never just ‘chuck in’ a graph/data into a collection of sources unless it is completely self-explanatory.