Statistics and Sampling | Lesson 1 of 1

Understanding Statistics and Sampling

In this lesson:

  • Distinguish population from sample
  • Identify biased and representative sampling
  • Evaluate statistical claims using sampling quality
Grade 7 Math | 7.SP.A.1
Statistics and Sampling | Lesson 1 of 1

What You Will Learn Today

By the end of this lesson, you will be able to:

  1. Distinguish population from sample
  2. Explain why statisticians use samples
  3. Define a representative sample
  4. Explain why random sampling reduces bias
  5. Identify biased vs. representative sampling methods
  6. Evaluate statistical claims by sample quality
Grade 7 Math | 7.SP.A.1
Statistics and Sampling | Lesson 1 of 1

How Would We Find Out?

School cafeteria crowded with students, small group highlighted

What is the most popular lunch item in the school cafeteria?

Grade 7 Math | 7.SP.A.1
Statistics and Sampling | Lesson 1 of 1

Population: The Entire Group Under Study

  • A population is the entire group you want to learn about
  • The key question: "Who are we really interested in?"
  • Populations can be huge — all voters, all lightbulbs, all patients

Example: To learn about lunch preferences, the population is all students at our school.

Grade 7 Math | 7.SP.A.1
Statistics and Sampling | Lesson 1 of 1

Sample: The Subset We Study

  • A sample is a subset of the population that you actually study
  • The goal of a sample is to give information about the population, not just itself
  • Samples are chosen because studying the whole population is impractical

Why sample? Too many, too slow, too expensive, some unavailable.

Grade 7 Math | 7.SP.A.1
Statistics and Sampling | Lesson 1 of 1

Seeing Population and Sample Together

Large oval labeled "Population (all students)" containing a smaller highlighted oval labeled "Sample (50 students)"

  • The sample is always chosen from the population
  • Conclusions from the sample are about the population
Grade 7 Math | 7.SP.A.1
Statistics and Sampling | Lesson 1 of 1

Spotting Population and Sample in Context

Scenario Population Sample
Doctor checks 50 patients' BP All city adults 50 patients
Company tests 100 bags today All bags today 100 bags
Principal surveys 30 students All school students 30 students
Grade 7 Math | 7.SP.A.1
Statistics and Sampling | Lesson 1 of 1

Quick Check: Identify Population and Sample

A school principal surveys 30 randomly chosen students to learn about homework habits across the school.

What is the population? What is the sample?

Think for a moment before the next slide…

Grade 7 Math | 7.SP.A.1
Statistics and Sampling | Lesson 1 of 1

From Definitions to Sample Quality

We know what a sample is — but not all samples are equally useful.

Some samples give us accurate information about the population.
Others mislead us badly.

The difference: how the sample was selected.

Grade 7 Math | 7.SP.A.1
Statistics and Sampling | Lesson 1 of 1

Biased Sample: Misleading by Design

  • A biased sample does not accurately reflect the population
  • It systematically over-represents or under-represents part of the population
  • Bias comes from the selection process — not from lying or bad intentions

Key idea: Even well-meaning surveys can produce biased results.

Grade 7 Math | 7.SP.A.1
Statistics and Sampling | Lesson 1 of 1

Representative Sample: Reflecting the Population

  • A representative sample accurately reflects the characteristics of the population
  • It gives every subgroup a fair chance of being included
  • When a sample is representative, we can trust its results to generalize

Goal: Select a sample that looks like a "miniature version" of the population.

Grade 7 Math | 7.SP.A.1
Statistics and Sampling | Lesson 1 of 1

Biased Sample: Asking the Soccer Team

Scenario: A student asks soccer teammates: "What sport do 7th graders prefer?" She finds 90% prefer soccer.

  • Population: All 7th graders
  • Sample: Soccer team members
  • Problem: Only soccer players were asked — of course they prefer soccer!
  • Conclusion: This estimate likely misrepresents all 7th graders.
Grade 7 Math | 7.SP.A.1
Statistics and Sampling | Lesson 1 of 1

Biased Sample: Surveying the Toy Store Line

Scenario: A company surveys kids at a toy store to learn what toys children prefer.

  • Population: All children
  • Sample: Kids at a toy store
  • Problem: These kids already love toys — not typical of all children
  • Missing: Kids who never visit toy stores
Grade 7 Math | 7.SP.A.1
Statistics and Sampling | Lesson 1 of 1

Biased vs. Representative Side by Side

Two-column diagram: left shows soccer team circle labeled "Biased — only soccer players", right shows full class roster with random picks labeled "Representative — drawn from all students"

Does the selection method give everyone a fair chance?

Grade 7 Math | 7.SP.A.1
Statistics and Sampling | Lesson 1 of 1

Classify Each Sampling Method as Biased or Representative

Scenario Verdict
Height: PE class only Biased — skews athletic
200 randomly chosen teens, 10 schools Representative
City website survey, new park Biased — self-selection
School randomly picks 40 from roster Representative
Grade 7 Math | 7.SP.A.1
Statistics and Sampling | Lesson 1 of 1

Quick Check: Online Survey Bias

A city posts a survey on its website asking residents whether they support a new park.

Is this sampling method biased or representative? Why?

Consider: Who responds to voluntary online surveys?

Grade 7 Math | 7.SP.A.1
Statistics and Sampling | Lesson 1 of 1

Random Sampling: The Solution to Bias

  • Convenient, volunteer, and self-selected samples are almost always biased
  • Random sampling gives every member an equal chance of selection
  • No subgroup is systematically favored or excluded
Grade 7 Math | 7.SP.A.1
Statistics and Sampling | Lesson 1 of 1

Three Ways to Sample Randomly

Three panels: hat with name slips labeled "Lottery/Hat", number grid with circled values labeled "Random Number Generator", list with every 10th item highlighted labeled "Systematic Sampling"

All three give every member an equal chance of selection.

Grade 7 Math | 7.SP.A.1
Statistics and Sampling | Lesson 1 of 1

Comparing Random and Non-Random Methods

Method Random?
First 5 in the hall No — nearby ≠ random
Draw names from a bag Yes — equal chance
Students volunteer No — volunteers differ
RNG from roster Yes — equal probability
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Statistics and Sampling | Lesson 1 of 1

Quick Check: Is Volunteer Selection Random?

A teacher wants to know how many hours 7th graders sleep. She asks for volunteers to share their sleep times.

Is this random? Which students might volunteer — and why does that matter?

Grade 7 Math | 7.SP.A.1
Statistics and Sampling | Lesson 1 of 1

Does Random Always Equal Perfect?

No — random samples vary naturally.

  • A fair coin flipped 10 times may land heads 7 times — not biased, just variation
  • Over many random samples, results converge on the true population value

⚠️ A large biased sample is worse than a small random one.

Grade 7 Math | 7.SP.A.1
Statistics and Sampling | Lesson 1 of 1

Applying Your Toolkit to Real Claims

We now have all three pieces:

  • What a population and sample are
  • What makes a sample biased or representative
  • Why random sampling reduces bias
Grade 7 Math | 7.SP.A.1
Statistics and Sampling | Lesson 1 of 1

Four Questions for Evaluating Any Claim

# Question
1 Who is the population?
2 How was the sample selected?
3 Is the sample representative?
4 Should I trust this claim?
Grade 7 Math | 7.SP.A.1
Statistics and Sampling | Lesson 1 of 1

Evaluating Claim One: Magazine Survey

Claim: "75% of adults prefer brand X soap." (500 magazine subscribers polled online)

Question Answer
Population? All adults
Method? Self-selected subscribers
Representative? No — readers ≠ all adults
Trust it? No — self-selection bias
Grade 7 Math | 7.SP.A.1
Statistics and Sampling | Lesson 1 of 1

Evaluating Claim Two: Health Study

Claim: "Adults sleeping 7–8 hours have fewer health problems." (2,000 randomly selected from national registry)

Question Answer
Population? All adults
Method? Random, broad registry
Representative? Likely yes
Trust it? Yes — well-designed
Grade 7 Math | 7.SP.A.1
Statistics and Sampling | Lesson 1 of 1

Evaluating Claim Three: Five Friends

"80% of 7th graders prefer cats to dogs." (5 friends)

Question Answer
Population? All 7th graders
Method? Own friends — not random
Representative? No
Trust it? No — too small, biased
Grade 7 Math | 7.SP.A.1
Statistics and Sampling | Lesson 1 of 1

Your Turn: Apply the Four Questions

Claim A: Restaurant voluntary survey — 92% rate food excellent.

Claim B: Random sample of 1,000 households across all 50 states.

Which is more trustworthy? Apply the 4 Questions.

Grade 7 Math | 7.SP.A.1
Statistics and Sampling | Lesson 1 of 1

Key Ideas: Population, Sample, and Bias

Population = entire group; Sample = subset
✓ Only useful when representative
Biased = over- or under-represents systematically
Random = equal chance for every member

⚠️ Method quality beats sample size.

Grade 7 Math | 7.SP.A.1
Statistics and Sampling | Lesson 1 of 1

Common Mistakes to Watch Out For

⚠️ Larger sample ≠ better — method matters more
⚠️ Random sample ≠ perfect mirror — variation is normal
⚠️ Open to everyone ≠ unbiased — voluntary skews to extremes
⚠️ Statistical "random" = equal probability — not casual haphazard
⚠️ Say "our sample suggests…" not "students prefer…"

Grade 7 Math | 7.SP.A.1
Statistics and Sampling | Lesson 1 of 1

What's Next: Making Inferences from Samples

Coming up: 7.SP.A.2

  • Use sample data to estimate population characteristics
  • Compare two samples to draw conclusions
  • Understand how sample size affects reliability

Today's lesson was the foundation for all statistical inference.

Grade 7 Math | 7.SP.A.1

Click to begin the narrated lesson

Understand that statistics can be used to gain information about a population by examining a sample