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Define Appropriate Quantities | Lesson 2 of 2

Inventing and Defending Quantities

Lesson 2 of 2: Designing and Evaluating Measures

In this lesson:

  • Design a measure for an attribute that has no standard unit
  • Defend a quantity choice using a structured four-part framework
Grade 9 Quantitative Reasoning | HSN.Q.A.2
Define Appropriate Quantities | Lesson 2 of 2

Deck 2 Learning Objectives Today

By the end of this lesson:

  1. Design a novel measure for an attribute without a standard unit, checking it for dimensional sense and appropriate behavior
  2. Defend a quantity choice by stating what it measures, its units, its scope, and its blind spots
Grade 9 Quantitative Reasoning | HSN.Q.A.2
Define Appropriate Quantities | Lesson 2 of 2

When No Standard Measure Exists

Problem: A scientist suspects surface area affects how quickly a liquid evaporates.

She wants to test this experimentally.

What should she measure?

Surface area exists as a unit (cm²) — but is that the right quantity for this study?

Grade 9 Quantitative Reasoning | HSN.Q.A.2
Define Appropriate Quantities | Lesson 2 of 2

Step 1: Name the Relevant Attribute

What exactly are we trying to capture?

Not "surface area" in general — but surface area exposure: how much of the liquid's surface is exposed to air relative to the liquid's volume.

The attribute is more specific than "surface area alone."

Naming the attribute precisely is Step 1.

Grade 9 Quantitative Reasoning | HSN.Q.A.2
Define Appropriate Quantities | Lesson 2 of 2

Step 2: Express the Attribute as a Ratio

Three-column design diagram showing the measure-design process. Left column labeled Attribute shows text liquid surface exposed to air with a simple wide rectangle representing a shallow pan. Center column labeled Express as ratio shows a fraction with surface area over volume. Right column labeled Units shows the text cm squared over cm cubed equals 1 per cm with a note scales with surface area.

The units follow from the design — they don't need to be a pre-existing named unit.

Grade 9 Quantitative Reasoning | HSN.Q.A.2
Define Appropriate Quantities | Lesson 2 of 2

Step 3: Test the Measure at Boundaries

Double the surface area, keep volume constant — the measure should double:

If volume increases while area stays fixed → ratio decreases ✓

A good measure varies proportionally with the attribute it claims to measure.

Grade 9 Quantitative Reasoning | HSN.Q.A.2
Define Appropriate Quantities | Lesson 2 of 2

Three Proposals for School Building Use

Proposal Blind spot
Students / classrooms Ignores room size
Students / floor area Ignores scheduling
Use-hours / rooms / week Ignores instructional quality

Which is most fit for purpose — and for which question?

Grade 9 Quantitative Reasoning | HSN.Q.A.2
Define Appropriate Quantities | Lesson 2 of 2

What Makes a Measure Well-Designed?

A well-designed measure is:

  1. Dimensionally sensible — the units make mathematical sense
  2. Proportional — doubling the attribute roughly doubles the measure
  3. Practically computable — can be calculated from data you can actually collect

A measure that fails any of these three should be revised or rejected.

Grade 9 Quantitative Reasoning | HSN.Q.A.2
Define Appropriate Quantities | Lesson 2 of 2

Novel Units Are Invented — Not Found

Wrong: "A quantity is only valid if it uses a recognized unit name."

True: Widely-used units were all invented to fill a need:

  • Kilowatt-hours, person-hours, parts per million, points per game

Define a new unit freely — then check it behaves correctly.

Grade 9 Quantitative Reasoning | HSN.Q.A.2
Define Appropriate Quantities | Lesson 2 of 2

Quick Check: Does This Measure Pass?

Measure: books checked out per week

  1. If library visits double, does this measure double?
  2. What does it miss?
  3. How would you modify it to fix the blind spot?

Answer all three before advancing.

Grade 9 Quantitative Reasoning | HSN.Q.A.2
Define Appropriate Quantities | Lesson 2 of 2

Design a Measure for Room Usage Efficiency

Available data: floor plan (room areas), weekly schedule, enrollment by period

Propose one quantity:

  • State the formula and units
  • Check it against the three-question test

Combine two or three of the available data sources.

Grade 9 Quantitative Reasoning | HSN.Q.A.2
Define Appropriate Quantities | Lesson 2 of 2

Design a Gym Membership Measure

A gym wants to measure how effectively members use their membership.

Design a measure from scratch:

  1. Name the attribute precisely
  2. Express it as a ratio with units
  3. Test it at one boundary condition

No example provided — build the complete measure yourself.

Grade 9 Quantitative Reasoning | HSN.Q.A.2
Define Appropriate Quantities | Lesson 2 of 2

Designing vs. Defending: The Next Step

You can now design a quantity from scratch.

The next step: when multiple quantities exist for the same attribute, how do you defend your choice?

Design answers "what should we measure?" — defense answers "why this one and not the others?"

Grade 9 Quantitative Reasoning | HSN.Q.A.2
Define Appropriate Quantities | Lesson 2 of 2

Housing Affordability: Three Competing Measures

Three vertical measure cards arranged horizontally. Left card labeled Median Home Price shows formula median of prices and verdict Ignores income entirely in red. Center card labeled Price-to-Income Ratio shows formula median price divided by median income and verdict Compares medians in yellow. Right card labeled 30-Percent-Burden Rate shows formula percent of households with housing cost over 30 percent of income and verdict Most directly reflects affordability in teal. Bottom label reads Three legitimate measures — which fits your question?

Which quantity should a household use to evaluate a city?

Grade 9 Quantitative Reasoning | HSN.Q.A.2
Define Appropriate Quantities | Lesson 2 of 2

Four Questions for Evaluating Any Quantity

  1. What attribute does it measure?
  2. What are its units (and how is it computed)?
  3. What scope — which population, which time window?
  4. What blind spots — what does it not capture?

Apply this to any quantity you use or encounter.

Grade 9 Quantitative Reasoning | HSN.Q.A.2
Define Appropriate Quantities | Lesson 2 of 2

Apply Four Questions to Median Home Price

Apply the framework to: Median Home Price as a housing affordability measure

  1. What attribute does it measure?
  2. What are its units?
  3. What population and time window does it cover?
  4. What does it not capture?

Write all four responses before advancing.

Grade 9 Quantitative Reasoning | HSN.Q.A.2
Define Appropriate Quantities | Lesson 2 of 2

A Quantity Is a Position Worth Defending

Defining a quantity is taking a position:

"This is what matters about this situation, measured this way."

A well-defined quantity is:

  • Transparent about what it captures
  • Honest about what it misses

Choosing deliberately and justifying the choice is what rigorous quantitative reasoning looks like.

Grade 9 Quantitative Reasoning | HSN.Q.A.2
Define Appropriate Quantities | Lesson 2 of 2

Coming Up: Accuracy and Precision

You can now choose, design, and defend appropriate quantities.

The next question (HSN.Q.A.3): once you've defined your quantity, how precisely should you report it?

The right level of precision depends on the measurement context — not on the number of digits available.

Grade 9 Quantitative Reasoning | HSN.Q.A.2