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Hintz, Allison B. – Teaching Children Mathematics, 2013
"Strategy sharing" is a certain type of discussion that centers on students' ideas and occurs when children present different approaches to problems and provide information about how they solved the problem (Wood, Williams, and McNeal 2004). A teacher may orchestrate a strategy-sharing discussion to achieve one or more of the…
Descriptors: Teaching Methods, Learning Strategies, Mathematics Instruction, Word Problems (Mathematics)
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Levin-Goldberg, Jennifer – Journal of Instructional Research, 2012
As we journey further into the 21st century, apprehensions emerge among business leaders in American markets. These concerns do not go unwarranted or unnoticed. Contemporary data portrays a despondent picture regarding new graduate preparedness for the global workforce. The findings reveal that employers feel the new entrants are deficient in the…
Descriptors: Skill Development, Technology Integration, Educational Strategies, Educational Practices
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Bangs, Joann – American Journal of Business Education, 2012
This paper describes changing the way a business statistics course is taught through the use of just-in-time teaching methods. Implementing this method allowed for more time in the class to be spent focused on problem solving, resulting in students being able to handle more difficult problems. Students' perceptions of the just-in-time assignments…
Descriptors: Statistics, Business Administration Education, Teaching Methods, Student Attitudes
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Forstadt, Leslie A.; Doore, Brian – Journal of Extension, 2012
This article describes two methods for use in program development and refinement. Problem mapping and forcefield analysis are explained with a real-world example about parenting education. Both methods are visual and consider multiple causes and effects of a problem. The methods are effective for clearly thinking through a problem, identifying…
Descriptors: Program Development, Needs Assessment, Models, Program Descriptions
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Plotz, Mariana; Froneman, Sonica; Nieuwoudt, Hercules – African Journal of Research in Mathematics, Science and Technology Education, 2012
In this paper we offer a theoretical discussion on the mathematical content knowledge development of secondary school mathematics teachers. We discuss relevant studies from literature and use different views and conceptions of school mathematics to propose a model to develop or transform the mathematical content knowledge of secondary school…
Descriptors: Mathematics Instruction, Pedagogical Content Knowledge, Mathematics Teachers, Teacher Education Programs
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Ostler, Elliot; Flesch, Michael – MathAMATYC Educator, 2012
This paper justifies the need for, and offers some suggestions on, the selection and implementation of mathematical problems known as dynamic solution exercises (DSEs). The intent of this article is to help provide insight into how mathematics teachers can go about making "vertical articulation" a cooperative and tangible part of the…
Descriptors: Mathematics Curriculum, Program Implementation, Educational Strategies, Problem Sets
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Sealey, Vicki; Engelke, Nicole – MathAMATYC Educator, 2012
The great gorilla jump is an activity designed to allow calculus students to construct an understanding of the structure of the Riemann sum and definite integral. The activity uses the ideas of position, velocity, and time to allow students to explore familiar ideas in a new way. Our research has shown that introducing the definite integral as…
Descriptors: Calculus, Word Problems (Mathematics), Mathematics Activities, Problem Solving
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Bennett, Cory A. – Mathematics Teaching in the Middle School, 2012
Crime Scene for Mathematics Investigation (CSMI) was created as a small group, cooperative, self-selective grouping strategy to allow students to explore mathematics based on their own understanding and perceived readiness, much like the concept and application of literature circles in language arts. In essence, these self-chosen small groups met…
Descriptors: Mathematical Concepts, Cooperative Learning, Misconceptions, Police
Kimmel, Sue C. – Library Media Connection, 2012
Which potato chip is healthiest: (1) regular; (2) baked; or (3) sour cream and onion? This problem requires critical and numerical skills in order to read and compare nutrition labels. The question has applications in mathematics and science classrooms but also in teachers' lounges and school cafeterias. It is a problem that addresses the five…
Descriptors: Mathematics Education, School Libraries, Critical Thinking, Librarians
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Deaton, Cynthia C. M.; Chessin, Debby; Coskey, Shawn – Science Activities: Classroom Projects and Curriculum Ideas, 2012
Build It Up! is an engaging activity that integrates science with mathematics through a process that encourages problem-solving, principles of design, creativity, and developing a sense of one's community. This activity, aimed at third- and fourth-grade students, allows students to use manipulatives to design, construct, and test buildings they…
Descriptors: Science Process Skills, Mathematics, Interdisciplinary Approach, Problem Solving
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Herman, Geoffrey L.; Loui, Michael C.; Kaczmarczyk, Lisa; Zilles, Craig – ACM Transactions on Computing Education, 2012
The ability to reason with formal logic is a foundational skill for computer scientists and computer engineers that scaffolds the abilities to design, debug, and optimize. By interviewing students about their understanding of propositional logic and their ability to translate from English specifications to Boolean expressions, we characterized…
Descriptors: Interviews, Logical Thinking, Computer Science, Scientists
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Love, Edwin; Stelling, Pete – Marketing Education Review, 2012
The reaction that occurs when Mentos are added to bottled soft drinks has become a staple demonstration in earth science courses to explain how volcanoes erupt. This paper presents how this engaging exercise can be used in a marketing research course to provide hands-on experience with problem formation, hypothesis testing, and causal research. A…
Descriptors: Marketing, Research, Comparative Analysis, Experiments
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Schwartz, Daniel L.; Chase, Catherine C.; Bransford, John D. – Educational Psychologist, 2012
Many approaches to instruction focus on helping people learn to recognize "the old in the new"--to turn what would otherwise be novel problems into familiar patterns that can be solved efficiently through the reuse of prior learning. Instruction that leads to efficient transfer is important, but it can also promote what we call "overzealous"…
Descriptors: Transfer of Training, Prior Learning, Teaching Methods, Science Instruction
Richardson, Will – District Administration, 2012
The idea of learning through games isn't necessarily new. In fact, over the past decade, researchers have been espousing the use of games to help both children and adults learn. But it's only been recently that games have begun to make serious inroads into classrooms. As the world becomes more and more driven by mobile apps and tablet…
Descriptors: Games, Attitude Change, Instructional Effectiveness, Educational Environment
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Charlesworth, Rosalind; Leali, Shirley A. – Early Childhood Education Journal, 2012
Mathematics problem solving provides a means for obtaining a view of young children's understanding of mathematics as they move through the early childhood concept development sequence. Assessment information can be obtained through observations and interviews as children develop problem solutions. Examples of preschool, kindergarten, and primary…
Descriptors: Symbols (Mathematics), Young Children, Concept Formation, Kindergarten
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