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Kindergarten · Data & Probability

Likelihood of Familiar Events

Is it likely or unlikely to snow in July in Vancouver? Could it rain today? Will the sun rise tomorrow? These everyday probability questions introduce students to one of mathematics' most important ideas: not all events are equally likely. The language of likelihood — likely, unlikely, impossible, certain — gives students the words to reason about uncertainty. This vocabulary, built in Kindergarten, carries students all the way to formal probability in middle and high school.

LESSON VIDEO
Lesson video
A short walkthrough to play in class or assign for flipped/at-home viewing.
WHAT STUDENTS WILL LEARN
Describe events using the language of probability: likely, unlikely, impossible, certain
Connect likelihood to personal experience: weather, daily routines, familiar contexts
Compare two events and identify which is more likely to happen
Understand that some events are certain (always happen) and some are impossible (never happen)