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Preview of Dear Future AP Student Letter | After AP Exam Reflection Activity | Any AP Class

Dear Future AP Student Letter | After AP Exam Reflection Activity | Any AP Class

Looking for a meaningful, no-prep activity after the AP exam? This “Dear Future AP Student” letter activity gives students a chance to reflect on their experience while creating something that actually matters—advice for next year’s class. 💌 Students write a structured letter sharing what helped them succeed, what they wish they had known earlier, and advice for future AP students. The result is a collection of authentic, student-written tips you can reuse during the first week of school year
Preview of Nerdy Numbers: A Flavorful T-Test Activity | Made for Statistics & IB Math AI

Nerdy Numbers: A Flavorful T-Test Activity | Made for Statistics & IB Math AI

Created by
Straight A Math
Bring statistics to life with candy and critical thinking in Nerdy Numbers, a fun, hands-on t-test activity designed for IB Math AI or any high school statistics course! Students begin by counting the number of each color Nerd candy in a small pack. After collecting class-wide data, they perform a two-sample t-test to investigate whether a specific color is equally represented — calculating the p-value and making decisions based on their results. What’s Included: Step-by-step instruct
Preview of AP Statistics After the Exam Activities Bundle | End of Year Review

AP Statistics After the Exam Activities Bundle | End of Year Review

Keep students engaged after the AP Statistics exam with this bundle of 4 ready-to-use after the AP exam activities, including a data collection final project, movie guide, mini-poster project, and reflection letter activity. Instead of empty downtime after testing, students stay productive with a mix of real-world application, review, and reflection. Each activity can be used independently, or combined for 2+ weeks of structured, meaningful content. These activities are fully planned and easy t
Preview of Psychology Lab Do Quiet People Feel More? Introversion and Empathy

Psychology Lab Do Quiet People Feel More? Introversion and Empathy

Created by
Brian Garber
Students complete the Introversion subscale of an Introversion/Extraversion test and the Toronto Empathy Questionnaire (TEQ), then pool paired scores from 9 classmates to calculate a Pearson r. The lab explores an open and genuinely uncertain empirical question: are introverts more or less empathic than extraverts, or is there no relationship? Students make a directional prediction before seeing the data, explain possible psychological mechanisms (introverts' tendency toward inner reflection may
Preview of Psychology Lab What Goes With Depression More: Overthinking or Isolation?

Psychology Lab What Goes With Depression More: Overthinking or Isolation?

Created by
Brian Garber
Students complete the Major Depression Inventory MDI (X), the Rumination Response Scale RRS (Y), and the UCLA Loneliness Scale UPLAS (Z), then collect all three scores from 9 classmates and run two correlations: Depression vs. Rumination and Depression vs. Loneliness. The lab distinguishes between depression's internal cognitive driver (rumination — repetitive negative thought) and its social consequence (loneliness — felt disconnection), asking which is more strongly correlated with depressive
Preview of Psychology Lab What Fuels Stress More: Dwelling on It or Never Being Enough?

Psychology Lab What Fuels Stress More: Dwelling on It or Never Being Enough?

Created by
Brian Garber
Students complete the Perceived Stress Scale PSS (X), the Rumination Response Scale RRS (Y), and the SAPS Perfectionism Discrepancy subscale (Z), then collect all three scores from 9 classmates and run two correlations: Perceived Stress vs. Rumination and Perceived Stress vs. Perfectionism. The lab investigates whether stress is more strongly amplified by repetitive negative thinking or by the gap between impossibly high standards and actual performance. Students evaluate a fictional claim that
Preview of AP Statistics Sticky Note Lab — Linear Regression (Slope, Intercept, Residuals)

AP Statistics Sticky Note Lab — Linear Regression (Slope, Intercept, Residuals)

How Tall is a Sticky Note? (Hands-On, Low Prep) Engage your AP Statistics students with a fun, hands-on regression activity they’ll actually remember! In this lab, students estimate the thickness of a single sticky note by stacking and measuring different counts of notes, then modeling the relationship with a least-squares regression line (LSRL).Students collect their own data, interpret slope and intercept in context, check model fit with residuals, and make both forward and inverse prediction
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