
marzo 12, 2026
febrero 18, 2026
Weeks 23 & 24: Function COUNTIF() – Conditional Counting
CLASS OBJECTIVE
Learn how to use the COUNTIF() function to count cells that meet a specific condition and apply it to analyze simple data in spreadsheets.

๐ CLASS AGENDA
๐ฌ Introduction
“Imagine you have a list of grades and you want to know how many students passed.
Instead of counting one by one, the spreadsheet can count only the ones you choose.”
1️⃣ Short Review
Students recall:
What a function is
What a range is (A1:A10)
What counting functions do (COUNT, COUNTA, COUNTBLANK)
2️⃣ Explanation: What is COUNTIF()?
COUNTIF() counts cells that meet a specific condition.
๐ Structure:
=COUNTIF(range, criteria)Range → Where we look
Criteria → What we are looking for
๐ก Simple definition:
“COUNTIF counts how many cells match a rule.”
3️⃣ Examples
๐น Count how many students passed:
=COUNTIF(A1:A10, "Passed")๐น Count how many grades are greater than 70:
=COUNTIF(A1:A10, ">70")๐น Count how many times the word “Yes” appears:
=COUNTIF(B1:B20, "Yes")Something to keep in mind :
Text criteria must go inside quotation marks
Numbers with symbols also use quotes (”>70”)
4️⃣ Demonstration:
Pay a lot of attention while your teacher shows you step by step:
Writing the formula
Selecting a range
Using text criteria
Using number conditions (> < =)
Changing values and watching results update
Please observe how the result changes automatically.
5️⃣ Activity – “Count With a Rule”
Students will use COUNTIF() in a small table (grades, attendance, preferences) to answer simple questions.
6️⃣
Homework
Students will complete a short spreadsheet using COUNTIF() with at least three different criteria.
7️⃣ Take notes in your notebook.

๐ NOTES IN YOUR NOTEBOOK
Answer these questions:
What does COUNTIF() do?
What are the two main parts of COUNTIF()?
Why do we use quotation marks in some criteria?
Write one example of COUNTIF() using numbers.
How can COUNTIF() help you as a student?
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๐ KEYWORDS
Function: A built-in calculation tool
Range: A group of cells (A1:A10)
Criteria: A condition used in a function
COUNT(): Counts numbers
COUNTA(): Counts non-empty cells
COUNTBLANK(): Counts empty cells
COUNTIF(): Counts cells that meet a condition
Quotation marks (” “): Used for text or comparison criteria
Weeks 21 and 22: Review & Practice – Spreadsheets (Sheets)
CLASS OBJECTIVE
Review and strengthen the use of basic spreadsheet tools — data types, basic formulas, functions, and counting — to help students feel confident working with spreadsheets independently.
๐ CLASS AGENDA
๐ฌ Introduction
“We have learned many tools in spreadsheets. Today is about practicing and making everything easier, not harder.”
1️⃣ Short Review
Teacher reviews with students:
What a spreadsheet is
Basic elements:
Cell
Row
Column
Difference between:
Data (text, numbers)
Formulas
2️⃣ Explanation: What We Know So Far
Teacher briefly reviews:
Formulas
Start with =
Use operators (+ – * /)
Functions
SUM()
AVERAGE()
MIN()
MAX()
Counting functions
COUNT()
COUNTA()
COUNTBLANK()
3️⃣ Demonstration
Teacher opens a simple spreadsheet and demonstrates:
Writing a basic formula
Using one function (SUM or AVERAGE)
Using one counting function
Changing a value and watching the result update
Students observe and ask questions.
4️⃣ Activity – “Practice Makes Easy”
Students will practice with a simple table combining data, formulas, functions, and counting.
5️⃣ Take notes in your notebook.
๐ NOTES IN YOUR NOTEBOOK
Answer these questions:
What is the difference between data and a formula?
What function helps you calculate an average?
When would you use COUNTBLANK()?
Why is it important to review spreadsheets?
⸻
๐
KEYWORDS
Spreadsheet: A digital table for organizing data
Data: Information written in cells
Formula: A calculation that starts with =
Function: A built-in calculation
COUNT(): Counts numbers
COUNTA(): Counts non-empty cells
febrero 04, 2026
Week 20 - Sorting, Filtering & Functions (Applied Together)
CLASS OBJECTIVE
Apply sorting, filtering, and basic functions (SUMA, PROMEDIO, MIN, MAX, COUNT, COUNTA and COUNTBLANK) together to organize and analyze simple data efficiently in a spreadsheet.
⸻
๐
CLASS AGENDA
๐ฌ Introduction
“Imagine you have a list of grades, expenses, or attendance.
What if you could organize it, see only what you need, and calculate everything automatically?”
1️⃣ Short Review
Students recall:
What sorting does (change order).
What filtering does (show specific data).
What functions do (calculate or count automatically).
Teacher reminds:
๐ Spreadsheets are powerful when you combine tools.
2️⃣ Explanation: Working With Data Step by Step
Teacher explains the correct order:
Organize data (clear table with headers).
Sort data (A–Z, highest to lowest).
Filter data (show only what you need).
Apply functions to analyze results.
Simple examples:
Sort grades from highest to lowest.
Filter only “Passed” students.
Use PROMEDIO() to find average grade.
3️⃣ Demonstration
Teacher shows a simple table (grades, attendance, or expenses) and demonstrates:
Turning filters on and off.
Sorting numeric and text data.
Applying functions after filtering.
How results change when data changes.
Students observe how one table gives many answers.
4️⃣ Activity – “From Data to Answers”
Students will organize a table, apply sorting and filters, and use functions to answer simple questions.
5️⃣ Take notes in your notebook.
๐ NOTES IN YOUR NOTEBOOK
Answer these questions:
Why is it important to sort data before analyzing it?
What is the advantage of filtering information?
Which function do you use to calculate an average?
How can these tools help you in real life (school or home)?
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๐
KEYWORDS
Sort: Change the order of data.
Filter: Show specific information only.
Function: A built-in calculation tool.
PROMEDIO(): Calculates average.
Data analysis: Understanding information using tools.
enero 26, 2026
Week 19: Counting Functions – COUNT(), COUNTA(), COUNTBLANK()

CLASS OBJECTIVE
Learn how to use basic counting functions in a spreadsheet — COUNT(), COUNTA(), and COUNTBLANK() — in order to identify how many cells contain numbers, text, or are empty.
⸻
๐ CLASS AGENDA
๐ฌ Introduction
“Imagine you have a list of assignments and you want to know how many you finished and how many are missing.
Instead of counting by hand, a spreadsheet can count for you.”
1️⃣ Short Review
Students recall:
What a range is (A1:A10)
What a function is (name + parentheses + arguments)
Basic data types: text, number, blank
2️⃣ Explanation: What Are Counting Functions?
Teacher explains:
Counting functions count cells automatically depending on what is inside them.
๐ก Simple definition for students:
“Counting functions help the spreadsheet tell you how many things you have.”
3️⃣ Explanation of Each Function
Teacher shows simple examples for each one.
๐น COUNT() – Counts only numbers
=COUNT(A1:A10)
Example:
Count how many grades (numbers) are written.
๐น COUNTA() – Counts all non-empty cells
=COUNTA(A1:A10)
Counts:
Numbers
Text
Example:
Count how many students wrote something.
๐น COUNTBLANK() – Counts empty cells
=COUNTBLANK(A1:A10)
Example:
Check how many assignments are missing.
Teacher demonstrates using simple datasets such as:
Homework: Completed / Blank
Attendance: Name / Empty cell
Grades list
4️⃣ Demonstration
Teacher opens a spreadsheet and shows step by step:
How to write each function
How to select ranges correctly
How changing data updates the result instantly
Students observe how each function works with real examples.
5️⃣ Activity – “Counting My Data”
Students will work with a small table (attendance, homework, preferences) and apply all three counting functions.
6️⃣ Take notes in your notebook.
๐ NOTES IN YOUR NOTEBOOK
Answer these questions:
What does the COUNT() function count, and write an example?
When is COUNTA() more useful than COUNT(), and write an example?
What does COUNTBLANK() help you identify and write an example?
Why are counting functions useful for students?
⸻
๐ KEYWORDS
COUNT(): Counts only numbers
COUNTA(): Counts non-empty cells
COUNTBLANK(): Counts empty cells
Range: A group of cells (A1:A10)
Data type: Text, number, or blank