Balancing Bathtubs in Math Class
Eva Jensen
Department of War Studies
Swedish National Defence College
P.O. Box 27805
SE-115 93 Stockholm, Sweden
Telephone: + 46 8 5534 2610
Fax: + 46 8 5534 2600
E-mail: eva.jensen@ fhs.se
What of the knowledge that is required to understand dynamic systems is covered by the
traditional school math curriculum? In this study, the Booth Sweeney and Sterman (2000)
bathtub tasks and the Jensen and Brehmer (2003) rabbits-and-foxes task were dissected into
aspects. Questionnaires with tasks tapping into the identified aspects were administered to
first-semester university engineering students and hypotheses were formulated concerning
their performance, based on an analysis of the high school mathematics curriculum. The
results largely conformed to the expectations. However, many participants misunderstood the
questions addressing ability to perform control operation, which is required by the rabbits-
and-foxes task. This is something that is not taught in schools, and we do not know what
questions to ask because we know too little about how people think about control. We would
also need to test the tasks with different participant groups, to learn about what aspects are
learnt under what circumstances.
What is the relation between system dynamics and school mathematics? Systems thinking,
considering causal loops and nets (maybe using causal loop diagrams), rather than solely one-
way causal chains, we seldom see in traditional school mathematics (Ossimitz, 2000).
In system dynamics, the objective is to simulate the behavior of systems. For that purpose,
accumulations (stocks) are separated from transactions (flows) of goods (which are sometimes
of a more abstract nature), and values are estimated for the parameters determining system
behavior.
System dynamics uses stocks and flows instead of difference or differential equations to
describe systems. The stock-and-flow diagrams are, however, converted into difference
equations by the simulation software. Thus, stock-and-flow diagrams can be seen as a more
user-friendly representation than differential (or difference) equations of a dynamic system.
They convey the structure and relations of the parts that constitute a system in an illustrative
way. They also allow the user to assign values to parameters and define relations without
formal knowledge of differential (or difference) equations or any other sophisticated
mathematics. This might also be one of its dangers; it is deceptively easy to use. The software
constructs all the complex equations and performs all the calculations for the user, but what
about the results? How easy are they to interpret?
Is there anything in the representation that suggests how the behavior of flows affects the
behavior of stocks, or vice versa? No, this is no part of the stock-and-flow representation. As
already mentioned, the stock-and-flow diagrams describe the structure of systems, something
that could be represented in various ways. System behavior, however, is described by line
graphs, a fairly traditional way of describing behavior of variables in time. The bathtub tasks
(Booth Sweeney & Sterman, 2000) test if the participants can figure out, and graphically
represents, what is in a container, from information about the behavior in the pipes attached to
it.
Flows describe changes to stocks. Inflows add to the stock, and outflows reduce it. The net
flow is mathematically the derivative of the stock variable. Similarly, the net change in the
stock variable during a specified period of time [t1, t2] is the integral of the net flow during
this time period. Thus, stocks and flows is just another way to represent derivatives and
integrals. Even if you do not need to be able calculate derivatives and integrals formally, you
probably need to understand the principles conceptually, to fully, if at all, appreciate the
results from a system dynamics simulation. It seems likely that the ability to solve the bathtub
problems should be closely related to knowledge about derivatives and integrals.
Both derivatives and integrals are generally dealt with formally before, or in the process of,
developing a conceptual understanding of them. In Sweden these concepts are introduced
rather late in the mathematics course in high school (e.g., Bjork & Brolin, 2000b), and only to
those who choose the full mathematics course offered, which generally are students following
the science or technology programs. Integrals are among the last things introduced before the
students graduate from high school. This means that it might take some additional
mathematics studies at university level for these concepts to be fully mastered.
A body of studies testing the bathtub tasks with different student groups has accumulated,
since the problems were first published (Booth Sweeney & Sterman, 2000; Fisher, 2003;
Kainz & Ossimitz, 2002; Kapmaier, 2004; Lyneis & Lyneis, 2003; Ossimitz, 2002; Zaraza,
2003). Together they paint a picture in which system classes (Zaraza, 2003), advanced algebra
and calculus (Fisher, 2003; Zaraza, 2003), and a major in engineering (Kapmaier, 2004), all
contribute favorably to the performance in these tasks.
In the present study, the bathtub tasks are analyzed in terms of what knowledge they require
that might be related to what is taught in regular mathematics classes. This might shed some
light on why the different student groups performing the task perform the way they do.
Jensen and Brehmer (2003) investigated how people interpret and make use of information
provided in line graphs, the means generally used to communicate simulation results. The line
graphs describe the behavior of a rabbit (prey) population and a fox (predator) population.
The populations mutually influence each other, and the task is to bring the system to
equilibrium by controlling the size of the fox population. People generally experience severe
problems when performing this task (Jensen 2003, 2005; Jensen & Brehmer, 2003).
Understanding the bathtub problems is probably fundamental, at least to some extent, to
understanding the rabbits-and-foxes task. The rabbits and foxes can be viewed as two stocks
(bathtubs) with inflows and outflows. In addition, the rabbits-and-foxes task addresses aspects
not covered by the bathtub task, but nonetheless important and fundamental to the
understanding of dynamic systems.
Hence, the rabbits-and-foxes task can also be dissected into aspects, some addressed by
school mathematics, others not. To capture the different aspects of the rabbits-and-foxes task
and the bathtub tasks, tasks addressing specific aspects have been constructed, some of them
inspired by Kaintz and Ossimitz (2002).
In the present study, questionnaires with tasks tapping into relevant aspects were administered
to university students who had recently completed a science or technology program in high
school. Hypotheses are formulated concerning the difficulty of the different tasks in regard of
the mathematical background of this student group. Hypotheses are also formulated regarding
how performance in these tasks will be related to performance in other tasks included in the
questionnaires.
One particularly important aspect is the control performance required by the rabbits-and-foxes
task. This is something that probably receives very little attention in schools. It is, however,
possible that people learn to perform system control in other situations, outside the school
curriculum. To control a system may pose quite different demands than merely understanding,
representing or predicting system behavior. Perhaps the former are prerequisites for the latter,
but at the present time we do not know.
I have used the textbooks on high school mathematics by Bjork & Brolin (2000a, b) as my
major source of information conceming what is taught and when in the mathematics
classrooms of the Swedish high schools. It is not likely that all the participants had been
subjected to these textbooks when in high school, and all teachers do not follow the textbook
that closely. Students following the same study program at different high schools in Sweden
are, however, expected to acquire the same knowledge regardless of where in the country they
are studying. This contributes to quite a high degree of homogeneity, both in classroom work
and in textbook construction. There is not a great number of textbooks in high school
mathematics to choose from, and they all cover largely the same topics in a similar order. The
Bjork & Brolin (2000a, b) books were chosen because they are fairly typical of Swedish high
school mathematics textbooks and they seem to be widely used.
Method
Participants: Twenty first-semester engineering students, nineteen male and one female, at
Lulea Technical University at Skelleftea volunteered to participate, and were rewarded with
two cinema tickets. Their mean age was 21 years, ranging from 19 to 27. During the initial
semester, they generally take courses in scientific method and other courses unrelated to
mathematics. They were expected to have concluded their studies at high school recently, in a
science or technology program, and not having studied much mathematics yet since then. We
made sure they had followed a science or technology program in high school.
Questionnaires: The questions in the questionnaires can be found in the A ppendix (supporting
material) to this paper. Two different questionnaires were constructed. For some tasks an
important transfer could be expected. These tasks were put in different questionnaires. This
solution also made it possible to include more tasks without producing unnecessary fatigue on
behalf of our participants.
Procedure: The questionnaires, 10 of each set, were administered randomly to the
participants. The participant groups receiving the different sets of questionnaires are called
Group X and Group Y respectively. The questionnaires were answered individually, but
administered in a group session. A fellow student supervised the sessions. The participants
were allowed a maximum of two hours to fill in the questionnaire. In addition to solving the
problems, they answered questions about their age, gender, how much time they spent on the
questions, if they thought the allotted time was enough, and they indicated on a Likert-scale
how difficult they found the questions (1 =very easy, 7 = very hard).
Analysis of Required Knowledge, Tasks Selected Testing and Participant’ s Performance
In the following, the analysis of the knowledge required by the bathtub tasks and the rabbits-
and-foxes task is presented, together with the tasks used to test for the different aspects
identified, and the resulting performance. The results are summarized in Table 1 at the end of
this section (page 14). Only frequencies of correct answers are reported, and no statistical
tests have been performed on the answers to the questions. The number of participants, ten in
each group, is too low to render any effects, other than really dramatic ones (of which there
are none), significant. The study was more a kind pilot study to provide an initial test of the
questionnaires. Therefore, the results need to be interpreted with some caution.
All tasks, with the solutions, can be found in the Appendix to this paper. I refer the reader to
the Appendix for more detailed information about the tasks used, and a strongly recommend
the reader too have the Appendix available when reading this paper. The tasks are not
included as figures in the paper, because that would have split the text into small fragments
scattered between large figures. The numbering of the tasks A1-A 20 refers to their place in
the Appendix.
The research questions concemed the following topics:
* What pieces of knowledge are required to solve the bathtub tasks and the rabbits-and-
foxes-task?
* Which of these pieces belong to the regular high school mathematics curriculum?
* Can the performance of participants who have recently completed high school
mathematics, in tasks tapping into the identified knowledge aspects, be predicted from
what they have been taught in high school?
Reading and Drawing Graphs
Drawing graphs
One aspect addressed by Kainz and Ossimitz (2002), but not by Booth Sweeney and Sterman
(2000), is whether people might experience trouble with the graphical representation. To
receive a graphical presentation of a derivative of a function, and to use this information, to
integrate it in order to produce the function of which it is the derivative, might be an
unfamiliar task to the participants. Kainz and Ossimitz (2002) devised tasks that offered a
written description of inflow and outflow of a bathtub during a specified time interval, with
the task to depict the graph of the amount of water in the bathtub, or the water flows in and
out of it. These tasks were used with slight modifications in the present study (Question A7:
producing a flow graph from text, and Question A8: producing stock graphs from text). Kainz
and Ossimitz (2002) found that it was significantly more difficult for the participating
Austrian Business Administration students to depict the flows than to draw the water stock.
This was expected to be true of our participants as well, because students are rarely asked to
draw that kind of graphs in Swedish schools either. In addition, the easier bathtub task was
inverted, so that instead of producing the stock from information about the flows, the
participants were asked to produce a graph of the inflow from information about the stock and
the outflow (Question A 2). This was expected to be a more difficult task than the original task
(Question A1), because it is more alien to tasks found in traditional schoolbooks in
mathematics (e.g., Bjork & Brolin, 2000a, 2000b). The inverted bathtub task (A2) was
expected to be the most difficult one, followed by the original bathtub task (A1), producing
flows from text (A7), and producing stock from text (A8), in descending order according to
expected difficulty.
In accordance with the hypothesis, fewer participants succeeded in the inverted form of the
simpler bathtub task (A2) than in its original form (A1). Five of ten were successful at the
former, while eight of ten at the latter. Performance in Question A7, producing flow graphs
from text, was as good as in the original easy bathtub task; eight of ten solved that task too.
Seven of them were among the eight successful in Question A1, the easy bathtub task.
Performance in Question A8, producing stock from text, however, was not as good as
expected. Five of ten solved that task, in other words, as many as who solved the inverted
bathtub task (A2). Four of these were among the five successful at the inverted bathtub task
(A2). The low performance in Question A8, producing stock from text, can probably be
explained by a mistake made when the task was constructed. As can be seen in Appendix A8,
the author miscalculated the maximum amount of water in the tub, making the stock go way
above the provided graphing area. This, in all likelihood, added to the difficulty of the task,
but it was, however, solved by half of the participants in the group who received it.
Producing a flow graph from graphical stock information was more difficult for the
participants than producing a stock graph from graphical flow information, and than
producing flow graphs from written information. People are more familiar with written
information, and reading graphs demands some additional effort even from our group of
participants.
That producing a graph of the inflow from information about the stock (and outflow) would
be more difficult than producing a stock graphs from information about the flows was
expected from how these matters are taught in the Swedish high school (Bjork & Brolin,
2000a, 2000b). The participants were, however, quite successful in producing flow graphs
from text, which was a little unexpected. This is not much practiced in the Swedish high
school. It was also the case that participants successful at producing stock graphs tended to be
successful at producing flow graphs as well, and vice versa.
The low performance in the task of producing a stock graph from text I attribute to
unfortunate task construction.
Reading graphs
The results from the simulation of the rabbits-and-foxes system are presented in line graphs,
as results usually are from system dynamics simulations. Hence, the rabbits-and-foxes task
requires the ability to interpret and combine information in line graphs. Questions A14-A17
tests the ability to extract information from the combination of a line graph describing the
evolution of the rabbit population during a specified time period and a line graph depicting the
development of the fox population during the same time period. How the two populations are
related to one another is described in qualitative terms, not specifying the exact values of the
parameters involved. Question A14 shows an increasing rabbit population and a fox
population that first declines moderately and then grows to about the initial size. Question
A15 depicts decreasing rabbits and decreasing foxes, and Question A16 illustrates the
equilibrium situation with both populations constant. In Question A17, the rabbits first
increase while the number of foxes also grows, due to the abundance of food. Eventually, the
foxes are numerous enough to turn the rabbit population from increasing to decreasing. The
participants were asked to describe what happened to the rabbits and foxes during the pictured
time interval, and why.
Earlier results suggest that most people recognize the equilibrium situation in A16 (Jensen,
2003, 2005; Jensen & Brehmer, 2003). The participants were expected to have little trouble
describing the behavior of the populations in A14 or A15, but would they combine the
information in the two separate graphs, and relate it to one another, in their explanations?
Social science students, who have participated in our previous studies, tend to find it very
difficult to produce a reasonable explanation to the development depicted in A17 (Jensen,
2003, 2005; Jensen & Brehmer, 2003). They seem not to manage to combine the behavior
depicted in the graphs with the information provided in writing, in order to deduce something
coherent. If they were, they would gain information useful for obtaining the goal of
equilibrium populations.
All tasks in Questions A14-A17 require the ability to read graphs, but also the ability to
combine and relate information in two separate graphs. Question A 17, in particular, demands
such ability. This is something not very much practiced in high school mathematics (e.g.,
Bjork & Brolin, 2000a, 2000b). The performance was therefore expected to be weak in A17,
better in A14 and A15, and rather good in A16. In A14 and A15, the descriptions relating the
information in the graphs was expected to be less than perfect for most participants.
Questions A14-A17 produced the expected pattem of performance. All ten participants
presented with the equilibrium situation in A16 correctly identified it as such, and four of the
ten presented the first increasing then decreasing rabbit population together with an increasing
fox population, in A17, gave a correct explanation to these graphs. Seven of ten gave a correct
answer to A 14, and six of ten to A15, which were both expected to be of moderate and similar
difficulty. The explanations provided for the behavior of the rabbit and fox populations were
actually better than expected. The information in both graphs was combined in the
explanations given by the successful participants, and the success rate in Question A17 was
somewhat higher than expected. Of the four successful in A17 only two solved A15, which
also was a bit surprising.
Reading line graphs was not expected to be a problem to our participants. To ascertain this, a
slightly modified version of the hotel problem developed by Kainz and Ossimitz (2002) was
constructed, with the same information in tabular form, Question A13, and in a line graph,
Question A12. The graph (A12) or table (A13) presents the number of guests arriving or
departing each day during a two-week period. A12 a) and A13 a) asks when there are the
most people staying at the hotel, A12 b) and A13 b) on what day most people arrive, and A12
c) and A13 c) when most people depart. No difference in performance was expected between
the groups administered the different versions of the task. Kainz and Ossimitz (2002) reported
a performance difference in favor of the tabular presentation, but the participants in the
present study were expected to be as familiar with line graphs as with tables.
Questions A12 b), A12 c), A13 b) and A13 c) test only for simple point reading in a graph (or
a table), while A12 a) and A13 a) require combining information in two graphs (or tables). It
is therefore reasonable to expect performance in A13 a) and, in particular A 12 a), to be related
to performance in Questions A14-A17. Reading a point value in a single graph was hardly
expected to be a problem to our group of participants. They were all expected to produce
correct answers to A12 b), A12 c), A13 b) and A13 c). Combining information in graphs is
not much practiced in high school (e.g., Bjork & Brolin, 2000a, 2000b), so they might
experience problems doing so, and then, consequently, in Questions A14-A17 as well. This
reasoning ought to apply to information presented in tables as well.
In Questions A12 and A13, performance was a little weaker in the line graph condition (A12)
than in the table condition (A13). This was not expected for the participants in the present
study, but conforms to the results reported by Kainz and Ossimitz (2002). Performance was
however high in the b), eight (A12) and nine (A13) of ten, and c), all ten (A12) and nine of
ten (A13), parts of Questions A12 and A13, while, as expected, weaker in A12 a) and A13 a),
four (A12) and six (A13), of ten for each questionnaire, gave a correct answer.
In Group X, there was no clear relation between performance in A12 a), most people in hotel
(line graph), and A14, increasing rabbits and little change in foxes. Only two of the four
successful in A12 a) solved A 14, and only three of the seven successful in A14 solved A12 a).
As mentioned above, all participants in Group X solved A16, and those who solved A12 a)
solved A12 b) and A12 c) as well. There were about as many of those who succeeded at A12
b) and A12 c), most guests arriving and departing, who solved A14 as who did not solve A14.
In Group Y, there was an overlap in performance in Questions A13 a) and A15, and
Questions A13 a) and A15. Five of the six successful in A13 a), most people in hotel (table),
solved A15, decreasing rabbits and foxes, and five of the six successful in A15 solved A13 a).
Of the four successful in A17, the first increasing and then decreasing rabbit population, three
solved A13 a). Questions A13 b) and A13 c) were excluded from this analysis, since almost
everyone in Group Y solved these tasks.
The participants were quite apt at merely reading information from graphs. They were
somewhat less good at combining information in graphs and interpreting the message
provided. They were however, and not very surprisingly, better at this than the Social Science
students who participated in our prior studies (Jensen 2003, 2005; Jensen & Brehmer, 2003).
Calculating Bathtub Behavior
Booth Sweeney and Sterman (2000) analyzed both their bathtub tasks in terms of the kind of
understanding they demanded. This was also used as performance criteria. What they did not
do was to relate this required understanding to what is taught in mathematics classes in
schools.
If we begin by looking at the easier bathtub task, the one generally solved by a majority of the
participants (A1), Booth Sweeney and Sterman (2000) used the following seven criteria for
judging performance.
1. When the inflow exceeds the outflow, the stock is rising.
2. When the outflow exceeds the inflow, the stock is falling.
3. The peaks and troughs of the stock occur when the net flow crosses zero (i.e., at t = 4,
8, 12, 16).
4. The stock should not show any discontinuous jumps (it is continuous).
5. During each segment the net flow is constant so the stock must be rising (falling)
linearly.
6. The slope of the stock during each segment is the net rate (i.e., + 25 units/time period).
7. The quantity added to (removed from) the stock during each segment is the area
enclosed by the net rate (i.e., 25 units/time period * 4 time periods = 100 units, so the
stock peaks at 200 units and falls to a minimum of 100 units).
For the difficult bathtub task (A18), Criteria 1, 2, and 4, are the same, while Criterion 3 for the
difficult bathtub task is:
3. The peaks and troughs of the stock occur when the net flow crosses zero (i.e., at t = 2,
6, 10, 14)
Criterion 5 for the difficult bathtub task states:
5. The slope of the stock at any time is the net rate: Therefore:
a. When the net flow is positive and falling, the stock is rising at a diminishing rate
(0 <t<2;8<t<10).
b. When the net flow is negative and rising, the stock is falling at a decreasing rate
(2 <t<4; 10 <t<12).
c. When the net flow is negative and rising, the stock is falling at a decreasing rate
(4<t<6; 12 <t<14).
d. When the net flow is positive and rising, the stock is rising at an increasing rate
(6<t<8; 14 <t< 16).
Criteria 6 and 7 together correspond to Criterion 6 for the easier bathtub task:
6. The slope of the stock when the net rate is at its maximum is 50 units/period (t = 0, 8,
16).
7. The slope of the stock when the net rate is at its minimum is -50 units/period (t = 4,
12).
And, Criterion 8 corresponds to Criterion 7 in the easy bathtub task.
8. The quantity added to (removed from) the stock during each segment of two periods is
the area enclosed by the net rate (i.e., a triangle with area + * 50 units/period * 2
periods = + 50 units). The stock therefore peaks at 150 units and reaches a minimum
of 50 units.
Criterion 3, for the difficult bathtub task (A 18) demands that you know that the derivative is
zero in extreme points, the peaks and troughs of the function. For the easier bathtub task (A 1),
this kind of knowledge does apply, but you can easily do without it. This is something that is
introduced rather late in the Swedish high school (e.g., Bjork & Brolin, 2000b). It was
therefore expected that most participants in our study would find this difficult. There was no
task in the questionnaire addressing this kind of understanding specifically, but if you master
Criterion 5 you will probably also master Criterion 3, but this, of course, needs to be
empirically confirmed.
The major difference in difficulty between the two bathtub tasks is to be found in Criterion 5.
This is also supported by results (Both Sweeney & Sterman, 2000; Kapmaier, 2004).
Generally speaking, all criteria pose higher demands in the difficult bathtub task than in the
easier one. It is Criterion 5, however, that particularly demands an insight into the relation
between a function and its derivative, or a function and its corresponding primitive functions,
ie., its integral. Question A20 intended to test this kind of understanding with a more
traditional mathematics task. In A20 a) the task is to calculate the velocity after one minute of
a vehicle accelerating constantly by 2 m/s’ from standstill, and A20 asks what distance the
vehicle will have traveled then (after having accelerated for one minute). This, at least A20 b),
requires an understanding of nonlinear behavior, such as exponential growth, which was
tested by Question A 3. A3 uses a classic example and asks, in A3 a), when half a pond will be
covered by water lilies that double every day if it is completely covered in 30 days, and A3 b)
asks when a quarter of the pond was covered. Exponential growth is introduced early in high
school mathematics (Bjork & Brolin, 2000a) and should therefore not pose any trouble to the
participating student group. This kind of understanding might also be related to a feel for the
continuous aspect of the rabbits-and-foxes task (see below).
For the difficult bathtub task (A18) Criteria 6 and 7 are closely related to Criterion 5 and to
Criterion 6 for the easier bathtub task (A 1).
Criterion 8 for the difficult bathtub task (A18) is the parallel to Criterion 7 for the easier
bathtub task (A1), and requires fairly similar reasoning. It concems the principle of
integration as area calculation, or a conceptual understanding of mathematical integration.
Question A 20 b) can be solved by integration as area calculation, but might as well be solved
by algebraic integration. Integration, both approached by algebraic and by area calculation,
are among the last subjects to be taught in the mathematics courses of the Swedish high
school. Therefore, it was considered unlikely that more than perhaps a few participants would
correctly solve these tasks.
It was hypothesized that anyone who solves the difficult bathtub task (A 18) would also solve
the water lilies problem (A3), Question A 20 a) velocity and b) distance from acceleration, as
well as the easier bathtub task in either form presented (A1 and A2). Y ou may use integration
as area calculation to solve the easier bathtub task, but (change in) stock = (constant) flow *
time suffices, and is something students acquire even before they enter high school. This was
also tested by Question A19, which ought to present no problem to any of the participants. It
simply asks the participants to calculate the distance travelled by a car that travel at a constant
speed that changes stepwise once during the specified time period (see A ppendix A19).
The difficult bathtub task (A18), was solved correctly by four of the participants, two of
whom also solved A20 a) and A20 b), a) velocity and b) distance from acceleration. It was the
same two participants who solved both subtasks of Question A20. Distance from acceleration
(A20 b) was only solved by those two just mentioned, while velocity from acceleration (A20
a) was solved by half (10) of the 20 participants. Thus, calculating distance from acceleration
(A20 b) was not easier, as it was expected to be, than solving the difficult bathtub task (A18),
and performance in the difficult bathtub task (A18) and calculating velocity and distance from
acceleration (A 20) was not closely related, in contrast with my hypothesis.
Question A3, the water lilies problem, both a) and b), was solved by 17 of the participants.
Either, both A3 a) and A3 b) were correctly answered, or none of them, as was the case of the
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remaining three participants. The four who succeeded at the difficult bathtub task (A18) were
among the successful 17.
All four who solved the difficult bathtub (A18) task also succeeded at the simpler bathtub
task, either in the original version (A1) or the inverted version (A2), and, as expected, all
participants successfully completed Question A 19, the distance from constant speed problem.
They had no trouble calculating stock = flow * time, at constant flow.
Criterion 1 and criterion 2 were not tested for in the present study. They were considered
trivial to the participating student group. Students who have completed a program in science
or technology in high school will most certainly be familiar with the concept of net flow, as
the difference between inflow and outflow, and how net flow influences stock. If this
assumption were unwarranted, it would betray itself in a remarkably low performance in these
tasks.
Criterion 4 is closely intertwined with all the other criteria, and it is very hard to test for
specifically in any meaningful way. Any suggested shape of the variations in stock, however
bizarre, would be accepted as long as it was continuous. It seems few people make this
mistake (Booth Sweeney & Sterman, 2000; Kainz & Ossimitz, 2002; Kapmaier, 2004), and if
they do they are, in all likelihood, wrong in most other respects as well.
The participants had no problem calculating the accumulated stock from information about
flow and time duration when the flow was constant, and most of them were familiar with
exponential growth. Only a few were, however, able to figure out the behavior of the stock
resulting from a non-constant flow (to perform either numerical or graphical integration).
Balancing Predator and Prey
In the rabbits-and-foxes task, the participants receive a full description of the relations
describing the system: Every rabbit produces two offspring a year, and every fox eats 4% of
the rabbits a year. For every 180 rabbits consumed a new fox is born, and 20% of the fox
population dies each year.
A mathematical approach
Given this information it is possible to calculate the population sizes in equilibrium. Then you
would know what to strive for. In previous studies (Jensen, 2003; Jensen & Brehmer, 2003)
none of our participants proved able to correctly complete the necessary calculation. The
participants in these studies had various backgrounds regarding choice of program in high
school, and were therefore probably not quite as mathematically proficient as the participants
in the present study. Questions A5 and A6 tested if the participants were able to create the
equations necessary for the calculations, if induced to do so in a stepwise manner. In
equilibrium there are equal numbers of rabbits bom and rabbits eaten, and of foxes born and
foxes dying. Questions A5 and A6 consisted of four parts a)-d). In a), the participants were
asked to express in an algebraic expression (using R for the present number of rabbits, and F
for the foxes) the birth rate of the rabbits (in A5) or of the foxes (in A6). In b) they were asked
to express the death rate of the rabbits (A5) or the foxes (A6) in an algebraic expression.
Question A5 a) ought to be solved by the majority, and all should get A6 b) correct, while A5
b), and to a larger extent A6 a) might prove somewhat more difficult. All of the tasks were
11
expected to be within the ability of the selected participant group. The expected order of
difficulty, from easiest to hardest, were A6 b), A5 a), A5 b), and A6 a). The participants were
familiar with the task of constructing equations from written descriptions. They might,
however, find the expression describing the number of foxes bom a bit complicated.
Questions A5 c) and A6 c) asks how many rabbits (A5, or foxes in A6) are born compared to
how many that die, when in equilibrium. This would simply entail stating that the two
expressions already produced were equivalent with each other, which was not expected to be
a difficult task.
Question A5 d) and A6 d) asks if the information obtained in the previous steps could be used
in any way to leam something about the rabbits and/or foxes in equilibrium and, if so, what
and how. This might require some familiarity with solving systems of equations, arriving at
values for the different parameters in a stepwise manner. This seems not to be particularly
well practiced in high school, so this step might prove an obstacle to the participants.
The task of producing the algebraic expressions for the birth and death rates in Questions A5
and A6 produced the expected results, with some distortion that might be attributed to order
effects. Question A6 a), the birth rate of the foxes proved by far the most difficult, with only
one participant of ten giving the correct answer. The difficult first task probably disheartened
the participants into an unexpectedly low performance in task A6 b), where only six of ten
were able to produce the very simple answer. Six out of ten also gave a correct answer to the
more complicated A5 b), probably after being encouraged by the easy A5 a), which seven of
the ten answered correctly. Performance in the a) and b) tasks were somewhat, although not
perfectly, related. Of those six successful in A5 b), five were among the successful seven in
A5 a), and the only one successful in A6 a) failed A6 b).
Only five out of all twenty answered A5 c) (three) or A6 c) (two) correctly and stated that
births equals deaths in equilibrium, and nobody was able to figure out A5 d) or A6 d).
The participants were able to produce simpler algebraic expressions, but not more complex
ones, and setting up and solving a simple system of equations was clearly beyond their ability.
All this conformed to the expectations, but that only a quarter of the participants were able to
state that equilibrium means equal births and deaths, or a birth/death ratio of one, was a bit
surprising.
Balance or equilibrium
There is also the aspect of understanding the concept of equilibrium or balance, which ought
to be fully grasped by the participants in the present study. As already mentioned, Question
A16, presenting line graphs with constant rabbit and fox populations, taps into this, and so
does Question A4. In addition Question A4 assesses whether the participants are able to
perform adequate calculations to balance births of rabbits with consumption by foxes (See
Appendix A4). Questions A12 a) and A13 a), most guests in hotel, are also questions
demanding an understanding where to find the equilibrium point, in addition to the
requirement of being able to combine information in graphs. Question A16 requires only
recognition of the equilibrium situation, Questions A12 a) and A13 a) demands reading off
and combining information in graphs or tables, while Question A4 requires calculations to be
performed. I expected performance in these tasks to be related and the order of difficulty form
12
easier to harder: A16, A12 a) and A13 a), and A4. All these tasks were expected to be quite
easy for our participants.
Question A4, calculating the rabbit population necessary to compensate for the number killed
by foxes, was correctly solved by 11 of the 20 participants. This task was no more difficult
than Question A12 a) and A13 a) that received 10 of 20 answers correct. There was not a big
overlap in performance, however. Only six of those successful in Question A4 were
successful in Question 12 a) or 13 a). As mentioned earlier, all participants gave correct
answers to A16.
The participants had no problem recognizing an equilibrium situation presented to them.
Calculating the number of rabbits needed to produce enough offspring to compensate for the
number killed by foxes, or realizing that arrivals equals departures when the lines intersect,
were accomplished by half (although not entirely the same half) of the participants. This was
a little weaker performance than expected.
The continuous aspect
An important factor in the solution of the rabbits-and-foxes task is to understand the
continuous aspect of the system. Both populations, rabbits and foxes, evolve continuously
during the year (roughly simulated by calculating the development in one-month time-steps in
the simulation). Participants in previous studies, however, frequently made the mistake of
assuming the simulation to evolve in discrete one-year time-steps (Jensen, 2003; Jensen &
Brehmer, 2003). Booth Sweeney and Sterman (2000) have named this behavior spreadsheet
thinking.
I found no suitable way to test for this understanding in isolation, using the rabbits-and-foxes
example, but an understanding of the continuous, non-linear development of the predator and
prey populations, ought to be related to an understanding of exponential growth, tested by
Question A3 (the water lilies problem), by Question A20 b) (calculation distance from
acceleration), and by the difficult bathtub task (Question A18) (results reported in the
Calculating Bathtub Behavior section above). It should also be related to the ability to give
nuanced answers to Questions A14 and A15 and a comprehensive explanation to Question
A17 (combining information in a rabbit and a fox graph; results reported under Reading
graphs above).
Of the four successful in the difficult bathtub task, all were successful in A14, A15, or A17
(combining rabbit and fox graphs), while among the three failing A3 (the water lilies
problem) one succeeded in A14, increasing rabbits and little change in foxes, and one, quite
surprisingly, in A17, the first increasing and then decreasing rabbit population.
The participants, or at least about half of them, could be said to have a feeling for the
continuous aspect. They told a coherent story in time when describing the interactions of the
rabbits and foxes depicted in line graphs in Questions A14, A15, and A17.
The control aspect
To control an evolving process is not part of the mathematics curriculum of the Swedish high
school (e.g., Bjérk & Brolin, 2000a, 2000b). It might be introduced in technology classes, but
hardly beyond the utterly basic. Direct control, like regulating the heat of the stove when
13
cooking, is part of everyday life, and as far as no substantial delays are part of the process,
and the output is reasonably linearly related to the input, people are quite adapt at learning to
perform appropriate input (e.g., Crossman & Cooke, 1974; Moray, 1987). We found, in our
earlier studies (Jensen, 2003, 2005; Jensen & Brehmer, 2003), that the participants met an
increasing rabbit population by increasing the fox population, and a declining rabbit
population by reducing the foxes. Question A9 was intended to make sure that our
participants mastered this, and to introduce them to the tasks following.
Questions A9-A11 introduce the rabbits-and-foxes system with the general description,
including parameter values. In Question A9, the task for the participants was to keep the
rabbit population within certain limits, by adjusting the fox population to any size considered
suitable. They were presented with the population sizes one and two years ago, together with
the present numbers. They were asked to decide on the appropriate size of the fox population
in the present situation. The rabbits were more numerous than desired, so any request for a
larger fox population (within reasonable limits) would pass as a correct answer. All
participants were expected to be able to produce a correct solution.
All participants performed A9, while Group X received A10 and Group Y received A11.
In A11, the participants were again asked to decide on the desirable number of foxes based on
information about the present situation as well as the situation one and two years ago. This
time the rabbit population had been drastically reduced. Rules had changed, however, so that
hunting now regulated the fox population. This meant that the only way to increase the fox
population, once reduced by hunting, was to keep the puppies born. The participants were
asked about what size of the fox population they desired under the present circumstances
(A11 a), and if there was something they particularly needed to keep in mind with the new
means of fox control (A11 b).
Moxnes (1998; Moxnes & Saysel, 2004) has demonstrated that people fail to, for example, cut
the number of grazing animals below the equilibrium level when pastures have been too much
reduced. This is true even for participants who are able to calculate the equilibrium level or
who are explicitly informed about the equilibrium level.
In A10, the participants were instead presented with the goal of the original rabbits-and-foxes
task, to make the populations reach an equilibrium state. They were then asked to focus on the
fox population, and to think of explanations for a situation where more foxes were born than
died (A10 a). They were asked to suggest ways to reduce the number of fox births, and if
there were more than one way to achieve that (A10 b), and also which would be the preferable
alternative with the goal to achieve equilibrium in mind (A10 c).
The births of foxes can be reduced either by reducing the fox population or by reducing the
rabbit population (less food for the foxes). If the fox population is reduced when the rabbit
population is large enough to sustain a large fox population, the rabbit population will
increase dramatically. The preferred solution for approaching an equilibrium situation is
therefore the alternative to initially increase the fox population to reduce the rabbit
population, and then reduce the fox population the level considered appropriate.
This has proven to be the fundamental stumbling block for people performing the rabbits-and-
foxes task. Indirect reasoning of the kind required is nothing that is practiced in the Swedish
high school (e.g., Bjork & Brolin, 2000a, 2000b), at least not as a part of the mathematics
14
curriculum. People generally experience trouble with performing indirect reasoning (Evans,
Clibbens & Rood, 1995; Jensen, 2003). Therefore weak performance was expected in this
task.
Questions A9-A 11 seems to have been very confusing to the participants. Only 12 out of 20
gave the correct answer to Question A9. Of the remaining eight, seven refrained from
answering at all. Of those seven, six belonged to Group Y. To Question A10 b), suggesting
fewer rabbits is only a partially correct answer, but anyone making such a suggestion was
graded as correct, as did nine of the ten in Group X, but nobody got A10 c) right. Eight in
Group X could explain why the foxes grew more numerous (Question A 10 a).
One participant, however, who gave the correct answer to A 10 b), that one could either reduce
the rabbit population or the fox population, and suggested in A10 c) that one should do a bit
of both until one obtained even proportions. It is to some extent in the right direction,
although not entirely so.
Only three, of the ten in Group Y, gave an answer to A11 a). They were all correct, and one of
them was among those not offering answers to A9. Those who did not answer A11 a) offered
no answer to A11 b) either, and no one of the remaining three gave a correct answer to A11
b).
The results do not allow any conclusions regarding the participant’s grasp of the control
aspect. The tasks intended to address this, Questions A9-A11, were clearly misinterpreted by
a large number of the participants, leaving the results obtained rather meaningless.
Summary of Results
The results are summarized in Table 1 below.
Table 1. Results. The number of correct answers to the questions is presented (within
parentheses the number of participants who were administered the questions). All questions
were graded as either correct or incorrect.
Question | Group Description Performance | Percentage
Al xX The easy bathtub task 8 (10) 80
A2 ¥. The inverted easy bathtub task 5 (10) 50
A3 a) X4+Y Exponential growth 17 (20) 85
A3b) X4+Y 7". 17 (20) 85
A4 X+Y Compensate for rabbits killed 11 (20) 55
A5a) x Mathematically balancing rabbits 7 (10) 70
A6a) y: - “~ foxes 1 (10) 10
A5b) xX - “ - rabbits 6 (10) 60
A6 b) ¥ - “ - foxes 6 (10) 60
A5c) xX Mathematically balancing 3 (10) 30
A6c) Y 7". 2 (10) 20
A5d) xX 0 (10) 0
A6d) Y of. 0 (10) 0
A7 x Hugo’s bath flows 8 (10) 80
A8& ¥ Hugo’s bath stock 5 (10) 50
AQ X4+Y Fox control - transport 12 (20) 60
15
A10 a) xX Fox control - balance 8 (10) 80
A10b) xX 7". 9 (10) 90
A10c) xX 7". 0 (10) 0
Alla) ¥. Fox control - hunting 3 (10) 30
Allb) Y =“: 0 (10) 0
Al2a) xX Hotel - line graph 4 (10) 40
Ai3 a) y Hotel - table 6 (10) 60
A12b) X Hotel - line graph 8 (10) 80
A13b) Y Hotel - table 10 (10) 100
Al2c) X Hotel - line graph 7 (10) 70
A13c) ¥ Hotel - table 9 (10) 90
Al4 xX Rabbit-fox growth 7 (10) 70
A15 ¥ Rabbit-fox decline 6 (10) 60
Al6 xX Rabbit-fox equilibrium 10 (10) 100
Al7 Y Rabbit- fox “bump” 4 (10) 40
A18 X4Y | The difficult bathtub task 4 (20) 20
Al19 X4+Y Distance from speed 20 (20) 100
A20 a) X4+Y Velocity from acceleration 8 (20) 40
A20 b) X4+Y Distance from acceleration 2 (20) 10
Both questionnaires were considered to be rather difficult by the participants, with the Y
questionnaire as the more difficult of the two. The mean grade for the X questionnaire were
4.7 (s = 1.4), and for the Y questionnaire 5.8 (s = 0.8); t 1) =2.14, p <.05.
The participants spent 1 hour and 10 minutes on average on the questionnaires, ranging from
half an hour, for the fastest one, to two full hours, the maximum time allowed, for the
participant requiring the most time.
It appears as if the questionnaires are not too time consuming, so a few more questions could
be added. The participants perceived the questions to be difficult, although not unreasonably
so. A closer look at how the questions are divided into the two different questionnaires seems
to be needed, because the Y questionnaire was experienced as significantly more difficult than
the X questionnaire.
Questions Remaining
Concerning tasks
For reading and drawing graphs the stock from text task (Question A8) needs to be changed
so the result fits within the graph area. Otherwise I see no need for anything more.
Tasks addressing the understanding of a zero crossing of the derivative (the peaks and troughs
of a function) need to be added, and so do tasks testing more specifically the understanding of
the relation of between a function and its derivative, and its integral or primitive function(s).
Particularly, tasks are needed where the derivative is non-constant, when it is increasing or
decreasing (constantly or at an increasing or decreasing rate).
16
There is also a need for tasks that address the ability to perform algebraic and graphical
integration and that separates between these two abilities.
The task testing the ability to construct algebraic expressions, and combine them into a system
of equations (Questions A5 and A6) needs to be supplemented with some tests of the ability
to combine equations, to combine them to form systems of equations, and to solve single
equations as well as systems of equations.
To test for the understanding of a continuously evolving process, adding examples from other
domains than the ecological would perhaps be desirable.
The tasks addressing the control aspect are certainly in need of improvement. It is a difficult
aspect to address with paper-and-pencil tests, but it should at least be possible to do better
than this study. It would, however, probably be better approached by simple simulation tasks.
Concerning participant groups
When a reasonably well-working set of tasks has been devised, it needs to be administered to
other participant groups as well, such as undergraduate, as well as graduate, students in
mathematics, engineering, and system dynamics to learn about what circumstances that are
beneficial for acquiring the different knowledge elements. Students may participate in system
dynamics classes, and learn to build systems dynamics models, for example, and still be
lacking in the understanding of basic bathtub tasks (see, for example, Biber & Kasperidus,
2004), and there might be elements that traditional educations are quite successful at teaching.
Concerning education
In the present study, hypotheses about the participants’ prior knowledge were based solely on
studies on high school mathematics textbooks. It would, in all certainty, be beneficial to
interview teachers about how they teach the identified knowledge elements, successful
strategies they have identified, and what their students tend to find particularly demanding.
Conclusions
We do not know what kind of knowledge that is required to understand dynamic systems and
system dynamics that people learn or do not learn in schools.
We do not know what questions to ask and we do not fully understand the answers we receive
(or fail to receive).
More research effort is needed addressing these questions, or how else are we to improve
education or information about dynamic systems?
Acknowledgements
The Swedish Armed Forces Research and Development Program supported this research. I
thank Dr. Berndt Brehmer for his valuable comments on this paper. I also thank Johanna
Brehmer for recruiting the participants and administering the questionnaires.
17
References
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Appendix
The correct answers to the questions are given in red.
They were, for obvious reasons,not included with the questionnaires administered
to the participants.
AL The easy bathtub task
A2: The inverted easy bathtub task
A3 Exponential growth
A4 Compensate for rabbits killed
AS. Mathematically balancing rabbits
AG Mathematically balancing foxes
AZ. Hugo’s bath flows
A& Hugo’s bath stock
AS Fox control - transport
A10: Fox control - balance
AIL Fox control -hunting
A?2: Hotel - line graph
A13 Hotel - table
A14 Rabbit-fox growth
A15, Rabbit-fox decline
A16 Rabbit-fox equilibrium
A17. Rabbit-fox “bump”
A1& The difficult bathtub task
A19, Distance from speed
A20; Velocity (a) and distance (b) from acceleration
Al
Administered to Group X
Consider the bathtub shown below. Water flows in at a certain rate, and exits through the drain at
another rate.
Reproduced from “Bathtub dynamics: initial
results of a systems dynamics inventory” by
L. Booth Sweeney and J. D. Sterman, 2000,
System Dynamics Review, 16(4), p. 253
The graph below shows the hypothetical behavior of the inflow and outflow rates for the
bathtub. From the information, draw the behavior of the quantity of water in the tub on the
second graph below.
Assume the initial quantity in the tub ( at time zero) is 100 liters.
100 a a 1
Infl
E 7 pinflow
E 0 L Z
3. Outflow
2 254
E
0 T T T T T T T T T T T T T T T
0 2 4 6 8 10 12 14 16
Time (minutes)
200 ! a I ! Lo !
k 150-7
& 100-
F
: 505
2
i 0 T T T T T T T T T T T T T
0 2 4 6 8 10 12 14 16
Time (minutes)
A2
Administered to Group Y
Consider the bathtub shown below. Water flows in at a certain rate, and exits through the drain at
another rate.
The graph below shows the hypothetical behavior of the quantity of water in the bathtub.
From the information, draw the behavior of the inflow rate for tub the on the second graph
below. The outflow rate is 50 liters/minute.
200 1 ! 1 a
150-
100+
Quantity in bathbub (liters)
0 2 4 6 8 10 12 14 16
Flows (liters/minute)
o
oO
0 2 4 6 8 10 12 14 16
Time (minutes)
A3
Administered to both groups
Imagine a fast growing species of pond lilies, that doubles every day.
a) If it takes 30 days to completely cover a pond, when will the pond will
covered?
Two days earlier.
b) When will it be % covered?
The day before.
A4
Administered to both groups
If foxes are the only threat to a population of rabbits, the foxes collectively kill and eat
600 rabbits each year, and there are 4 rabbits born per every adult rabbit and year, how
many adult rabbits are required for the rabbits population not to be reduced? (Assume the
rabbits reach adulthood by the age of one year.)
At least 150 rabbits are required.
AS
Administered to Group X
Tf the situation for the rabbits and foxes (in 3a) is instead that:
every rabbit produces 5 offspring a year,
for every 200 rabbits eaten a fox is bom,
every fox consumes 1 % of the rabbits a year,
10 % of the foxes die each year.
Give an algebraic expression for (existing foxes = F and existing rabbits = R)
a) the number of rabbits born a year
5R
b) the number of rabbits eaten a year
0.01RF
c) In equilibrium, when both the rabbit and the fox population are constant, how
many rabbits are bom in relative to how many that are killed?
Equal numbers are born that die.
d) Can you use anything of what you have arrived at in a-c above to conclude
anything about the rabbits and/or foxes in equilibrium, and, if so, what and how?
Yes. 5R =0.01RF = F =500; In equilibrium, the number of foxes is 500.
A6
Administered to Group Y
If the situation for the rabbits and foxes (in 3a) is instead that:
every rabbit produces 5 offspring a year,
for every 200 rabbits eaten a fox is born,
every fox consumes 1 % of the rabbits a year,
10 % of the foxes die each year.
Give an algebraic expression for (existing foxes = F and existing rabbits = R)
a) the number of foxes bor a year
0.01RF/200
b) the number of foxes dead a year
0.1F
c) In equilibrium, when both the rabbit and the fox population are constant, how
many foxes are bom in relative to how many that die?
Equal numbers are born that die.
d) Can you use anything of what you have arrived at in a-c above to conclude
anything about the rabbits and/or foxes in equilibrium, and, if so, what and how?
Yes. 0.01RF/200 =0.1F > R = 2000;
In equilibrium, the number of rabbits is 2000.
A7
Administered to Group X
Hugo wants to have a bath before he goes out on Saturday evening. He turns on the faucet at
18.00 sharp. The water flows in at a constant rate of 15 liters per minute. Hugo, however, forget
o close the outlet, so water is flowing out at a rate of 10 liters per minute. At 18.05 Hugo enters
the bathroom and closes the outlet. At 18.15 Hugo closes the faucet and enjoys his bath during
15 minutes. Than he opens the drain to empty the bathtub.
Draw the behavior of the inflow (the upper graph) and outflow (the lower graph) of Hugo’s
bathtub between 18.00 and 19.00 this Saturday evening.
100-
Q0-}-----4------}----- feeb ed
a a a
a a a ne a a en ee: es er
E
5 60-
i
g
g 30- :
4 | | |
Soe ne es a pope ia ae ae aaa —
ip ener ee ee beveeefeeeecheneenbeneeed benbeeeeedieeen bene
0-+ ; : : ' ! : ;
18.00 18.05 18.10 1815 1820 1825 18.30 1835 1840 1845 1850 18.55 19.00
Time
:
I
:
18.00 18.05 18.10 1815 18.20 1825 1830 1835 1840 1845 1850 1855 19.00
Time
A8
Administered to Group Y
175 liters
lay evening. He turns on the faucet at
15 liters per minute. Hugo, however, forget
flowing out at a ratk of 10 liters per minute. At 18.05 Hugo enters
outlet. At 18.15 Hugd closes the faucet and enjoys his bath during
thtub.
Hugo wants to have a bath before he goes out on Sat
18.00 sharp. The water flowsi
0 close the outlet, so water j
the bathroom and closes
15 minutes. Than he openg the drain to empty the
Draw the behavior of thefamount of water in Hugo’s\pathtub between 18.00 and 19.00 this
Saturday evening.
100-
Quantity of water in the bathtub (liters)
Ss
1
18.00 18.05 18.10 1815 1820 18.25 1830 1835 1840 1845 1850 1855 19.00
Time
Inspired by “Can students learn stock-flow
thinking” by D. Kainz and G. Ossimitz. 2002.
Proceedings of the 20" International Conference of
the System Dynamics Conference. Palermo, Italy.
The Maier’s bathtub stock (Y 4), and bathtub flow
(X4) tasks.
A9
Administered to both groups
Imagine (once again) an island on which the only animal life consists of rabbits and foxes.
Y ou are the assigned fox keeper. Y our task is too keep the fox population at a size
adequate to keep the rabbit population within desired limits, which is somewhere
between 500 and 1500 rabbits.
Y ou may have foxes transported to and from the island at your request.
The conditions for the rabbits and foxes are:
Every rabbit produces 2 offspring a year.
For every 180 rabbits eaten a fox is bom,
Every fox consumes 4 % of the rabbits a year.
20 % of the foxes die each year.
During the last two years, no foxes have been transported. The development during that time:
Two years ago One year ago Now
Foxes 40 41 46
Rabbits 1000 1400 1780
What decision do you want to make regarding the size of the fox population?
How many foxes do you wish to have on the island?
Any request for a larger fox population, within reasonable limits, that is not exceeding 100,
would be accepted as a correct answer.
A10
Administered to Group X
(Same as in A9)
Every rabbit produces 2 offspring a year.
For every 180 rabbits eaten a fox is bom,
Every fox consumes 4 % of the rabbits a year.
20 % of the foxes die each year.
New directions: Due to economical restraints, one wishes to eliminate the need for
fox transports. The goal is to achieve a stable balance, an equilibrium, between
the rabbits and the foxes, so the foxes remains at a constant level without any
transports, and that the rabbits at the same time are kept at a constant level by
these foxes.
In consideration of this task, start by focusing on the foxes:
a)
If more foxes are born than die, why is that so?
It could be either that there are a lot of foxes eating rabbits and producing
offspring. It could also be that there are a lot of rabbits, the foxes eat a lot of
rabbits each and produce a lot of offspring. It could also be a combination of
those two.
What could be done so that less foxes are born? Can this be obtained in more
than one way? Which one(s)?
1. Reduce the fox population.
2. Increase the fox population to reduce the rabbit population. Then reduce the
fox population to an appropriate level.
Which way would be the preferable one, considering the goal to achieve an
equilibrium situation for the foxes and the rabbits?
Altemative 2. If the fox population is reduced when the rabbit population is
large enough to sustain a large fox population, the rabbit population will
increase dramatically. The preferred solution for approaching an equilibrium
situation is therefore alternative 2: reduce the rabbit population.
All
Administered to Group Y
(Same as in A9)
Every rabbit produces 2 offspring a year.
For every 180 rabbits eaten a fox is bom,
Every fox consumes 4 % of the rabbits a year.
20 % of the foxes die each year.
New directions: For economic reasons, fox transports will no longer be permitted.
The size of the fox population will from now on be regulated by hunting. Hunting is
the only means at your disposal for regulating the number of foxes.
During the last two years, no foxes have been shot (or transported).
The development during that time:
Two years ago One year ago Now
Foxes 60 61 57
Rabbits 1000 580 347
a) What decision do you wish to make conceming the foxes now? How many foxes do
you wish to have on the island?
Any request for a reduced fox population would be accepted as a correct answer.
b) Is there anything in particular that you need to consider with these new
prerequisites? (If so, what?)
Since importing foxes are no longer allowed, I need to be careful not to reduce the
fox population too much. It will take some years to rebuild the fox population, and
during that time the rabbit population might grow way out of limits.
AT2
Administered to Group X
The graph below describe how many guests that arrive and depart from a hotel each day
during a two-week period.
Inspired by “Can students learn stock-flow
thinking” by D. Kainz and G. Ossimitz. 2002.
Proceedings of the 20" International Conference of ——_——_——_ Arrive
the System Dynamics Conference. Palermo, Italy.
The graphical hospital task, = = 8 | | a-s--- Depart
50-
45 -} ---------}--------- f= === === 4
M0 ~p ont tf Nn 1
Solas teteiaiaiaiatatan tetateteh Wiel ey seaeaiaaiat |
30-f------- troeconeNfennnncnn denn |
95-|----#---4---------4----------------- |
20-po=------- fanaa---- |
15-f--------- + donnnnn n= |
Se | '
{osbssecet Te Hscsecuoss al
' '
Sf fonnnnnns oon
o-4
2 6
a) What day during this period is there the largest number of guest staying at the hotel?
Day 8
b) On what day do the largest number of guests arrive at the hotel?
Day 5
c) On what day do the largest number of guests depart from the hotel?
Day 11
The table below describe how many guests that arrive and depart from a hotel each day
A13
Administered to Group Y
during a two-week period.
Day Arrive Depart Day Arrive Depart
1 24 13 8 27 18
2 33 10 9 13 33
3 38 13 10 20 30
4 28 20 11 24 38
5 43 15 12 19 30
6 38 18 13 10 41
7 30 21 14 14 30
What day during this period is there the largest number of guest staying at the hotel?
Day 8
On what day do the largest number of guests arrive at the hotel?
Day 5
On what day do the largest number of guests depart from the hotel?
Day 13
Inspired by “Can students learn stock-flow
thinking” by D. Kainz and G. Ossimitz. 2002.
Proceedings of the 20" International Conference of
the System Dynamics Conference. Palermo, Italy.
The tabular hospital task.
Al4
Administered to Group X
Again, imagine an island with an animal life of only rabbits and foxes. Of these, the
following is known:
The rabbits produce offspring.
The foxes eat rabbits (the major cause of death for the rabbits).
The foxes do also produce offspring.
And, a number of foxes die each year.
Study the the graphs below and describe what happen to the rabbits and the foxes between
time tl and t2. Do also explain why the situation has evolved this way for the rabbits and the
foxes.
Foxes '
:
ee po--------
a
Time 2
What happens to the rabbits? Why? What happens to the foxes? Why?
The rabbit population grows from 600 to The fox population remains fairly
1300 at and constant near 35.
an increasing rate.
First, it decreases a little, down to 30,
The foxes are not many enough to keep in lack of enough food, due to a small
the rabbit population down. rabbit population. When the rabbit
population grows larger, the fox
population recovers, and will
continue to grow beyond t2.
A15
Administered to Group Y
Again, imagine an island with an animal life of only rabbits and foxes. Of these, the
following is known:
The rabbits produce offspring.
The foxes eat rabbits (the major cause of death for the rabbits).
The foxes do also produce offspring.
And, a number of foxes die each year.
Study the the graphs below and describe what happen to the rabbits and the foxes between
time t1 and t2. Do also explain why the situation has evolved this way for the rabbits and the
foxes.
A, Rabbits, a, Foxes;
2000+ 100-}-----4------------------ fowtesea
|
15004 a bawaa--2--
1000}------ poscnemusdeecnuc 504----- ae ne --------
R
soo fk 7 a a
0 > 0 >
tl Time 2 tl Time 2
What happens to the rabbits? Why? What happens to the foxes? Why?
The rabbit population decline at and The fox population declines from 65
a decreasing rate from around 850 to 300. to 50 at a slightly increasing rate.
There are a lot of foxes, and they reduce The fox population decreases at an
the rabbit population substantially. increasing rate due to an increasingly
Eventually, the fox population is also diminishing supply of food.
reduced to a level low enough for the
decline in rabbit population to level off.
A16
Administered to Group X
A A . Foxes r
2000+ 100------- | aa poscsnaaae
|
1500+ Ss ee banaa-----
1000 504----- SL
500 1 a : es a : aaa
0 0 ; 1 >
ist Time 7)
What happens to the rabbits? Why? What happens to the foxes? Why?
The rabbit population remains constant at The fox population remains constant
900 rabbits. at 50 foxes.
An equilibrium has been reached An equilibrium has been reached
between rabbits and foxes. Equally many between rabbits and foxes. Equally
rabbits are bom that are killed by foxes. many foxes are bom that die.
A17
Administered to Group Y
a, Rabbits,
20004------ | a ; aan
1 !
H H
i i
j
15004------ f-----f--------\-- sucess
t t
1000}------ ta \---------
: '
| t
5004------ a ie ne
i i
H H
! ‘
0 + + >
tl 2
Time
es ae
50
oh ded bs
6d cc
C
+
i
1
1
1
i?
t
t
1 Time
What happens to the rabbits? Why?
The rabbit population grows from 800 for
a little more than half the period to
around 1750, and then decline for the rest
of the period down to 1000.
Initially, there are too few foxes to keep
the rabbit population down. However
conditions are excellent for the foxes.
They reproduce rapidly and by mid-
period (or slightly after) they are
numerous enough to bring about a
decline in the rabbit population.
What happens to the foxes? Why?
The fox population grows from 40 to
approximately 58.
The foxes have food enough to
maintain a high reproduction rate
throughout the entire period.
Al8
Administered to both groups
Consider the bathtub shown below. Water flows in at a certain rate, and exits through the drain at
another rate.
<= Inflow
Reproduced from “Bathtub dynamics: initial
results of a systems dynamics inventory” by
L. Booth Sweeney and J. D. Sterman, 2000,
System Dynamics Review, 16(4), pp. 253-254
of;
The graph below shows the hypothetical behavior of the inflow and outflow rates for the
bathtub. From the information, draw the behavior of the quantity of water in the tub on the
second graph below.
Assume the initial quantity in the tub ( at time zero) is 100 liters.
100
75 4
Outflow
50 r =
25 Inflow ==
Flows (liters/minute)
Quantity in bathtub (liters)
3
i
0 2 4 6 8 10 12 14 16
Time (minutes)
A19
Administered to both groups
If acar travels at a speed of 70 kilometers/hour for 1% hour, and then at 85
kilometers/hour for 2 hours, how far has the car traveled?
275 km
A20
Administered to both groups
If a vehicle accelerate from standstill at 2 m/s? (minutes/second” for one minute,
a) what velocity will the vehicle have reached? 120 m/s
b) b) how far will it have traveled during this minute? 3600 m, or 3.6 km