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Lovin, LouAnn H. – Mathematics Teacher: Learning and Teaching PK-12, 2020
Moving beyond memorization of probability rules, the area model can be useful in making some significant ideas in probability more apparent to students. In particular, area models can help students understand when and why they multiply probabilities and when and why they add probabilities.
Descriptors: Middle School Students, High School Students, Secondary School Mathematics, Geometric Concepts
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Ebby, Caroline B.; Petit, Marjorie – Mathematics Teaching in the Middle School, 2017
A learning trajectory describes the progression of student thinking and strategies over time in terms of sophistication of both conceptual understanding and procedural fluency. Currently, learning trajectories exist in the research literature for many mathematical domains, including counting, addition and subtraction, multiplicative thinking,…
Descriptors: Formative Evaluation, Mathematics Instruction, Mathematics Teachers, Mathematical Concepts
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McDowell, Eric L. – Mathematics Teacher, 2016
By the time they reach middle school, all students have been taught to add fractions. However, not all have "learned" to add fractions. The common mistake in adding fractions is to report that a/b + c/d is equal to (a + c)/(b + d). It is certainly necessary to correct this mistake when a student makes it. However, this occasion also…
Descriptors: Fractions, Number Systems, Number Concepts, Numbers
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Karp, Karen S.; Bush, Sarah B.; Dougherty, Barbara J. – Mathematics Teaching in the Middle School, 2015
Many rules taught in mathematics classrooms "expire" when students develop knowledge that is more sophisticated, such as using new number systems. For example, in elementary grades, students are sometimes taught that "addition makes bigger" or "subtraction makes smaller" when learning to compute with whole numbers,…
Descriptors: Mathematics Instruction, Secondary School Mathematics, Middle School Students, Standards
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Wessman-Enzinger, Nicole M.; Mooney, Edward S. – Mathematics Teaching in the Middle School, 2014
The authors asked fifth-grade and eighth-grade students to pose stories for number sentences involving the addition and subtraction of integers. In this article, the authors look at eight stories from students. Which of these stories works for the given number sentence? What do they reveal about student thinking? When the authors examined these…
Descriptors: Numbers, Story Telling, Mathematics Instruction, Middle School Students
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Loong, Esther Yook Kin – Australian Mathematics Teacher, 2014
When solving mathematical problems, many students know the procedure to get to the answer but cannot explain why they are doing it in that way. According to Skemp (1976) these students have instrumental understanding but not relational understanding of the problem. They have accepted the rules to arriving at the answer without questioning or…
Descriptors: Mathematics Instruction, Mathematical Concepts, Concept Formation, Mathematical Logic
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Johanning, Debra I. – Mathematics Teaching in the Middle School, 2011
Estimation is more than a skill or an isolated topic. It is a thinking tool that needs to be emphasized during instruction so that students will learn to develop algorithmic procedures and meaning for fraction operations. For students to realize when fractions should be added, subtracted, multiplied, or divided, they need to develop a sense of…
Descriptors: Mathematics, Computation, Mathematics Instruction, Mathematics Education