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Seeley, Cathy L. – Educational Leadership, 2017
The traditional method of teaching math--showing students how to do a procedure, then assigning problems that require them to use that exact procedure--leads to adults who don't know how to approach problems that don't look like those in their math book. Seeley describes an alternative teaching method (upside-down teaching) in which teachers give…
Descriptors: Mathematics Instruction, Teaching Methods, Problem Solving, Models
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Ketterlin-Geller, Leanne R.; Jungjohann, Kathleen; Chard, David J.; Baker, Scott – Educational Leadership, 2007
Much of the difficulty that students encounter in the transition from arithmetic to algebra stems from their early learning and understanding of arithmetic. Too often, students learn about the whole number system and the operations that govern that system as a set of procedures to solve addition, subtraction, multiplication, and division problems.…
Descriptors: Number Systems, Word Problems (Mathematics), Arithmetic, Algebra
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Steen, Lynn Arthur – Educational Leadership, 2007
Many students in U.S. schools have trouble understanding fractions and Algebra II, the one difficultly occurring at the end of elementary school, the other in high school. One reason is that schools generally focus on one aspect of mathematics--calculation--and often fail to address the second aspect--interpretation. Also responsible is the…
Descriptors: High School Students, Mathematical Concepts, Algebra, College Students
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Schifter, Deborah – Educational Leadership, 2007
This article describes a mathematics lesson taught by a 5th grade teacher who engages her class in an in-depth examination of one student's incorrect solution to a problem. Because the teacher consistently asks her students to devise alternative calculation strategies and explain how those strategies work, the students have come to expect that…
Descriptors: Seminars, Grade 5, Faculty Development, Teaching Methods