The Spacetime Metric

Level 1 · Foundations teaching kit · Grades 8–9

Measurement, uncertainty, and evidence

Use the learner record during the live investigation, then use the instructor guide to facilitate comparison, address misconceptions, and assess evidence-bounded reasoning.

Learner lab record

Correlated uncertainty investigation

How does shared movement between two inputs change the uncertainty of a combined result?

Setup

Use the live uncertainty composer. Change one control at a time, keep a record of every setting, and treat correlation as a declared relationship rather than a guess.

Predict first

  1. 1. Predict the result when ρ=0.
  2. 2. Predict whether positive or negative correlation makes the combined interval wider.
Variables
VariableRoleUnit
Input uncertainty σxindependentchosen measurement unit
Input uncertainty σyindependentsame unit as σx
Correlation ρindependentunitless
Combined uncertainty σdependentchosen measurement unit

Observation columns

σxσyρcombined σwhat changed?

Analyze

  1. 1. Which run reproduced ordinary quadrature?
  2. 2. Which pair of runs isolates correlation?
  3. 3. What assumption would make your comparison invalid?
  4. 4. State the result with units and an uncertainty interval.

Conclusion frame

When ___ stayed fixed and ρ changed from ___ to ___, combined uncertainty changed from ___ to ___ because ___.

Instructor guide · 35–45 minutes

Teach the investigation, not the interface

Learning target: Learners distinguish independent quadrature from correlated uncertainty and defend a comparison using controlled variables.

Prepare

  • Open the uncertainty composer on every device.
  • Choose one familiar unit such as centimeters.
  • Prepare one deliberately flawed comparison for critique.

Facilitation moves

  • Ask which variable changed before discussing the number.
  • Have pairs reproduce one another's recorded setting.
  • Require units in every spoken conclusion.

Accessibility and participation

  • Read every Greek symbol aloud and pair it with its plain-language name.
  • Allow keyboard arrow control of every slider.
  • Offer the observation table before learners begin changing values.

Evidence of learning

  • A controlled two-run comparison
  • Correct use of units
  • A conclusion that names the role of correlation

Misconception checks

More measurements always remove uncertainty.

Repeated independent noise may shrink; shared bias and correlation do not disappear by repetition.

Negative correlation means bad data.

It describes opposing co-movement and can reduce a particular combined uncertainty.

Extension

Build a three-input budget and identify which covariance term dominates the output.