In this lesson:
By the end of this lesson:
Can you read a rate and name its numerator and denominator?
Question: Are U.S. highways getting safer?
Same data. Three different answers about whether safety is improving.
Which line is telling the truth?
Attribute: a quality we care about — safety, efficiency, well-being
Quantity: a specific measurable expression — a number with units computable from data
Quantification: choosing which aspect to measure, what units to use, and what the result means
Each quantity answers a different question about highway safety.
Each quantity is right for one question. None is universally correct.
Lesson 1 (HSN.Q.A.1): Units were given — your job was to use them correctly.
This lesson (HSN.Q.A.2): Quantities are not given — your job is to choose them.
Choosing what to measure is the first act of any data analysis.
Classify each:
Which items are attributes? Which are quantities? What makes the difference?
These quantities were invented — then adopted because they proved useful.
Same total labor — different organization.
Captures: total labor input Misses: how work is organized, quality, efficiency per worker
9 residents earn 20,000/yr; 1 earns 1,000,000:
Nobody in this town earns 118,000.
Warning: per-capita = total ÷ count — not a typical value when distributions are skewed.
Wrong: "There is a correct quantity for highway safety."
True: Different questions require different quantities.
"Appropriate" means fit for a specific purpose.
Same efficiency, opposite orientation. Car B is twice as efficient in both scales — but improvement savings are more linear in L/100km.
Scenario: A school district wants to compare schools by how well students learn.
Proposed quantity: percent of students scoring "proficient" on state tests
Apply the capture/miss framework before advancing.
A school wants to track how effectively students are using the library.
Your task: Propose one quantity to measure library use.
No setup provided — build the full measure yourself.
Every quantity:
Choosing the right quantity = choosing the right lens for the question you're asking.
The goal isn't to find the perfect measure — it's to choose deliberately and know what you're missing.
You can now evaluate and select standard measures.
Next lesson: what happens when no standard measure fits your attribute?
Click to begin the narrated lesson
Define appropriate quantities