Correlation vs Causation | Lesson 1 of 1

Distinguishing Correlation from Causation

Lesson 1 of 1: When Does Together Mean Caused?

In this lesson:

  • Tell a correlation claim from a causation claim
  • Find what really explains a correlation
Grade 9 Statistics | HSS.ID.C.9
Correlation vs Causation | Lesson 1 of 1

Learning Objectives for This Lesson

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

  1. Define correlation and causation as distinct claims
  2. Explain why correlation doesn't imply causation
  3. Name the four explanations for a correlation
  4. Recognize that an experiment supports causation
Grade 9 Statistics | HSS.ID.C.9
Correlation vs Causation | Lesson 1 of 1

Headlines Turn Correlation Into Cause

Everyday claims quietly turn correlation into causation:

  • "Coffee drinkers live longer" → coffee causes long life?
  • "More police, more crime" → police cause crime?

Most such leaps are unjustified. Let's build the habit to spot them.

Grade 9 Statistics | HSS.ID.C.9
Correlation vs Causation | Lesson 1 of 1

Shoe Size and Reading: Correlation, Not Cause

In children, shoe size and reading ability correlate strongly.

  • Do bigger feet cause better reading? Obviously not
  • The correlation is real — but there's no causal link

"Move together" and "one causes the other" are different claims.

Grade 9 Statistics | HSS.ID.C.9
Correlation vs Causation | Lesson 1 of 1

Correlation Moves Together; Causation Produces

Two precise, different claims:

  • Correlation: two variables tend to move together (measured by r)
  • Causation: changing one produces a change in the other

Exercise causes fitness (real mechanism); shoe size doesn't cause reading.

Grade 9 Statistics | HSS.ID.C.9
Correlation vs Causation | Lesson 1 of 1

Two Different Claims, Each a Sentence

Force any statement into one of two molds:

  • Correlation: "X and Y tend to occur together"
  • Causation: "X makes Y happen"

One is an observed pattern; the other an asserted mechanism.

Grade 9 Statistics | HSS.ID.C.9
Correlation vs Causation | Lesson 1 of 1

Classify: Correlation or Causation Claim?

Label each statement:

  1. "Students who sleep more tend to get higher grades"
  2. "This vitamin lowers your risk of sickness"
  3. "Taller people generally weigh more"

Classify each, then advance.

Answer: 1. Correlation. 2. Causation. 3. Correlation.

Grade 9 Statistics | HSS.ID.C.9
Correlation vs Causation | Lesson 1 of 1

If Not Cause, What Else Explains It?

A correlation is real — so something explains it.

  • Direct causation is only one possibility
  • There's a short menu of explanations

Knowing the menu replaces the reflex "correlate, so cause."

Grade 9 Statistics | HSS.ID.C.9
Correlation vs Causation | Lesson 1 of 1

The Four Explanations for Any Correlation

Four arrow diagrams: A arrow B direct, B arrow A reverse, C with arrows to both A and B lurking, and A and B with no link coincidence

Direct, reverse, lurking common cause, or coincidence — which fits?

Grade 9 Statistics | HSS.ID.C.9
Correlation vs Causation | Lesson 1 of 1

Direct and Reverse Causation Explained

The arrow's direction isn't given by the correlation:

  • Direct: A causes B (exercise → fitness)
  • Reverse: B causes A — does stress cause poor sleep, or the reverse?

Correlation is symmetric — it carries no direction.

Grade 9 Statistics | HSS.ID.C.9
Correlation vs Causation | Lesson 1 of 1

The Lurking Variable: A Hidden Common Cause

Summer heat with arrows pointing to both ice-cream sales and drowning deaths, and the direct arrow between ice cream and drowning crossed out

Summer drives both — the ice-cream–drowning link is real but not causal.

Grade 9 Statistics | HSS.ID.C.9
Correlation vs Causation | Lesson 1 of 1

Coincidence: A Spurious, Meaningless Correlation

Sometimes two variables move together by pure chance.

  • No mechanism, no lurking variable — just accident
  • With enough data, random matches appear

Not every correlation means anything — some are coincidence.

Grade 9 Statistics | HSS.ID.C.9
Correlation vs Causation | Lesson 1 of 1

A Lurking Variable Doesn't Make It Fake

Finding the lurking variable doesn't erase the correlation:

  • Ice cream really does predict drowning risk (both track summer)
  • Only the direct-cause reading is false

The relationship is real; the cause story is what's wrong.

Grade 9 Statistics | HSS.ID.C.9
Correlation vs Causation | Lesson 1 of 1

Explain Each Correlation; Name the Lurking Variable

Pick the explanation; name any lurking variable:

  1. More firefighters at a fire ↔ more damage
  2. More sunscreen use ↔ more sunburns
  3. Chocolate consumption ↔ Nobel prizes (by country)

Explain each, then advance.

Answer: 1. Lurking: fire size. 2. Lurking: sun exposure. 3. Lurking: national wealth.

Grade 9 Statistics | HSS.ID.C.9
Correlation vs Causation | Lesson 1 of 1

So What Evidence Proves Cause?

A lurking variable can always hide behind a correlation.

  • Observed correlation can't rule out hidden factors
  • We need evidence that controls for them

That evidence is the randomized experiment.

Grade 9 Statistics | HSS.ID.C.9
Correlation vs Causation | Lesson 1 of 1

Observation Alone Can't Prove Cause

An observational study just watches what already happens.

  • The groups differ in countless other ways
  • Any lurking variable could explain the difference

Observation reveals correlation, not a single cause.

Grade 9 Statistics | HSS.ID.C.9
Correlation vs Causation | Lesson 1 of 1

A Randomized Experiment Balances Lurking Variables

Subjects randomly split into a treatment group and a control group, with a lurking variable spread evenly across both

  • Random assignment balances the groups on everything else
  • A difference in outcome can be attributed to the treatment
Grade 9 Statistics | HSS.ID.C.9
Correlation vs Causation | Lesson 1 of 1

Correlation Is Still a Useful Tool

Don't dismiss correlation just because it isn't cause:

  • It predicts one variable from another
  • It flags relationships worth an experiment

A useful tool with a limit — not a trap to discard.

Grade 9 Statistics | HSS.ID.C.9
Correlation vs Causation | Lesson 1 of 1

Evaluate a Headline: Experiment or Observation?

"Coffee drinkers live longer." Walk the questions:

  • Observational — no one was randomly assigned to drink coffee
  • A lurking variable (wealth, exercise?) could explain it

The causal claim isn't justified — only an association.

Grade 9 Statistics | HSS.ID.C.9
Correlation vs Causation | Lesson 1 of 1

Does This Headline Justify Its Causal Claim?

"Students who eat breakfast score higher on tests."

  • Experiment or observation? What lurking variable?
  • Is the causal claim justified?

Decide, then advance.

Answer: Observational; lurking variable like home stability or income; cause not justified.

Grade 9 Statistics | HSS.ID.C.9
Correlation vs Causation | Lesson 1 of 1

Full Task: Explain, Find the Lurking Variable, Judge

A correlation: neighborhoods with more bookstores have higher incomes.

  1. Best explanation? Name any lurking variable
  2. Does the correlation justify a causal claim?
  3. What study would establish cause?

Do all three, then advance.

Answer: Lurking (wealth draws bookstores); no, it's observational; only an experiment could.

Grade 9 Statistics | HSS.ID.C.9
Correlation vs Causation | Lesson 1 of 1

Key Takeaways and What's Next

✓ Correlation and causation are different claims

✓ Ask "what else explains this?" — reverse, lurking, coincidence

✓ Only a randomized experiment establishes cause

⚠️ A lurking variable makes the correlation real, the cause false

⚠️ Correlation is still useful — it predicts and flags

Next: study design (HSS.IC).

Grade 9 Statistics | HSS.ID.C.9

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Distinguish correlation from causation