Teaching Organizing & Presenting Data to Support a Claim in Grade 5: Oklahoma Standard 5.DA.CVT.01
Teaching Organizing & Presenting Data to Support a Claim in Grade 5: Oklahoma Standard 5.DA.CVT.01
Teaching presenting data in grade 5 does not have to be complicated. Picture a class survey on favorite recess activities organized into a bar graph that supports a claim about the most popular choice. That kind of thinking is exactly what Oklahoma's grade 5 computer science standard 5.DA.CVT.01 asks students to practice — and it is very teachable with the right materials. This post walks through what the standard means, the misconceptions students bring to it, and discussion starters you can use tomorrow, whether you teach in a classroom or at your kitchen table.
What Does Standard 5.DA.CVT.01 Actually Ask?
Organize and present collected data to highlight comparisons and support a claim. — Oklahoma Academic Standards for Computer Science (February 2023)
In plain language: Oklahoma's standard asks fifth graders to organize collected data (like survey results) and present it using tables and graphs in a way that makes comparisons clear and supports a specific, evidence-based statement called a claim.
In student-friendly terms, the learning target is: "I can organize and present collected data to highlight comparisons and support a claim with evidence."
What Students Should Be Able to Do
- I can organize collected data into a table using clear categories.
- I can choose an appropriate type of graph (bar, line, or pie) based on the kind of data and comparison I want to show.
- I can label a graph's title, axes, and categories so any reader can understand it.
- I can write a claim and identify the specific evidence from a graph that supports it.
Along the way, students pick up the working vocabulary of the topic: data, result, claim, evidence, graph, chart, total, category, comparison, pattern, label, organize.
Presenting Data: Misconceptions to Watch For
These are the wrong turns students reliably take with this standard — knowing them ahead of time is half the lesson plan. Each correction strategy below comes straight from the unit's teacher guide (the paragraph and activity references point into the unit itself).
1. "Any type of graph can show any kind of data equally well, so the choice of graph does not really matter."
Revisit paragraphs 4-6. Bar graphs compare categories, line graphs show patterns over time, and pie charts show parts of a whole. Ask students to explain why the recess survey would be a poor fit for a line graph.
2. "A claim just needs to sound confident; it does not need to match the actual numbers in the data."
Use paragraph 7's soccer example. Compare the weak claim ('Everyone likes soccer the most') with the strong claim that cites 15 vs. 8. Have students practice rewriting weak claims using specific numbers.
3. "More categories or more colors on a graph always make it better and more informative."
Revisit paragraph 2's discussion of categories that are too broad or too narrow, and paragraph 8's discussion of accessibility. More categories or colors only help if they are clearly labeled and meaningfully different — otherwise they add confusion.
4. "Labels and titles are optional extras that can be added later if there is time."
Use paragraph 8's description of a graph that 'looks impressive but cannot be understood without someone standing next to it explaining it.' Labels and titles are part of presenting data well, not decoration.
Discussion Starters You Can Use Tomorrow
- Think of a question you could ask the whole class as a survey. What categories would you use for the answers, and why?
- Why might a bar graph and a pie chart of the SAME data tell slightly different 'stories' to someone looking at them?
- Describe a time you saw a graph or chart (in a book, on a screen, or somewhere else) that was hard to understand. What was missing or confusing?
Bringing It Home
This topic is a natural one for families. One ten-minute activity to try: Pick a simple question to ask everyone in your household (favorite season, favorite type of music, number of hours of screen time yesterday, etc.). Write down everyone's answers, organize them into a table together, and have your child describe what type of graph would best show the results and one claim the results support.
Where This Leads
Students who can organize and present collected data to highlight comparisons and support a claim with evidence are building skills used every day in data analysis, environmental science, business analytics, journalism / data visualization, and education and research.
Part of the Complete Grade 5 Computer Science Curriculum
This lesson covers just one standard. It is part of a complete grade 5 computer science curriculum aligned to every Oklahoma OAS CS standard. See the full listing — every standard, organized by strand — here: Grade 5 Computer Science Curriculum: Every Oklahoma OAS CS Standard.
See the Unit in Action
Get the Complete 5.DA.CVT.01 Unit
I built a complete, no-prep unit for this standard — Organizing and Presenting Data to Support a Claim — covering 3-4 days of instruction across 36 pages:
- Teacher guide — day-by-day pacing, misconceptions to watch for, discussion questions, differentiation for support / ELL / extension, and a 4-point rubric
- Student learning target page — a kid-friendly "I can" statement with success criteria
- Full content lesson with 3 embedded "Check Your Understanding" checkpoints
- 12-question assessment (6 multiple choice, 4 true/false, 2 short answer) with a complete answer key, explanations, and exemplar responses
- Group activity — "Graph It: From Survey to Claim" (25-30 minutes)
- Individual activity — "Claim, Data, Graph Reflection" (15-20 minutes)
- Crossword and word search built from all 12 vocabulary terms (with answer keys)
- Family connection letter — a plain-language page for parents, with dinner-table questions and a 10-minute home activity
- Certificate of achievement — ready to sign and send home
- Survey Data Sets for Graphing (separate printable, 2 pages)
- Graph Planning Organizer (separate printable, 1 page)
- Reference Notes: Organizing and Presenting Data (separate printable, 2 pages)
- Claim, Data, Graph (separate printable, 2 pages)
Get Organizing & Presenting Data to Support a Claim on Teachers Pay Teachers →
Also aligned to CSTA 1B-DA-06: Organize and present collected data visually to highlight relationships and support a claim.
Every Sooner Standards resource is built directly from the official Oklahoma Academic Standards for Computer Science (February 2023) — standard text verified, never paraphrased from memory.