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Using Primary Literature to Teach Data Literacy: Analyzing Finch Population Changes Before and After a Drought

This article explores the use of primary literature to teach data literacy skills, focusing on the analysis of finch population changes before and after a drought on the island of Daphne Major in the Galápagos Islands. It provides graphs and discussion questions to help students interpret and understand the data.

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Using Primary Literature to Teach Data Literacy: Analyzing Finch Population Changes Before and After a Drought

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  1. Data Point: Using Primary Literature to Teach Data Literacy What does it say? What does it mean? www.biointeractive.org

  2. Look at this graph. What do you see? What does it mean? www.biointeractive.org

  3. What do you notice about the graph now? Can you identify any variables or ranges of data? www.biointeractive.org

  4. What do you notice about the graph now? Can you identify any variables or type of graph? www.biointeractive.org

  5. What do you notice about the graph now? Do you know anything new? www.biointeractive.org

  6. Read the figure caption. Do you know anything new? www.biointeractive.org

  7. Read the background information. Do you know anything new? BACKGROUND INFORMATION Rosemary and Peter Grant performed a series of long-term studies on the finches on the island of Daphne Major in the Galápagos Islands. With its short, blunt beak, the medium ground finch (Geospizafortis) is adapted to picking up seeds from the ground. In 1976, seeds on the island were diverse and plentiful. However, during a drought in 1977, seeds became more scarce. Once the finches had eaten all the small and medium-sized seeds, they had to turn to larger, spiny seeds that are hard to crack open. The graph above shows the distribution of beak depths of the finch population before the drought (white bars) and after the drought (black bars). www.biointeractive.org

  8. Discussion Questions • How has the medium ground finch population changed after the drought? • Why do you think the Grants wanted to look at beak depth before and after the drought? • If the finches that survived reproduced, predict what the distribution of beak depths of the offspring would look like. How would this compare to the beak depth of the offspring hatched before the drought? www.biointeractive.org

  9. Based on your predictions to the last discussion question, look at these graphs and compare the offspring from 1976 to offspring from 1978.What do you see? What does it mean? Number of Birds Beak Depth (mm) Caption: Distributions of beak depths of fully grown offspring hatched in 1976 and 1978 respectively. www.biointeractive.org

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