Birds in the Garden

This activity asks you to collect information about the birds you see in the garden. Are there patterns in the data or do the birds seem to visit randomly?
Exploring and noticing Working systematically Conjecturing and generalising Visualising and representing Reasoning, convincing and proving
Being curious Being resourceful Being resilient Being collaborative


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Birds in the Garden


So many things that we look at in Maths have a regular steady pattern that we can find and explain. For a change, let's look at things that happen more randomly.

We sometimes throw dice, toss a coin or use a rhyme to choose something at random. In this problem, we'll have a look at something a bit different - birds in the garden.

So, let's do some bird watching in our garden - at home or at school. People who do a lot of bird watching keep a chart to record which birds visit their gardens. The chart might look like this:

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Birds in the Garden


You might want to use a similar chart over a period of, for example, a week. Or you could just do it for one day and note the time.

Once you have a few items recorded, it would be good to have a discussion about the information you have recorded and to ask yourself some questions about it.

How many birds of a particular type did you record on each day (or each hour)?

Did you see the same type of birds at specific times of the day?

How may different types of birds did you see each day (or each hour)?

You will be able to think of many other questions too.

Are you able to see any patterns in the information you collected or do the sightings of birds appear to be quite random?

If you do find any patterns, can you try to explain why, or at least have an idea of the reason?