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Gasco, Javier; Villarroel, Jose Domingo; Zuazagoitia, Dani – International Education Studies, 2014
The teaching and learning of mathematics cannot be understood without considering the resolution of word problems. These kinds of problems not only connect mathematical concepts with language (and therefore with reality) but also promote the learning related to other scientific areas. In primary school, problems are solved by using basic…
Descriptors: Word Problems (Mathematics), Problem Solving, Secondary School Mathematics, Mathematical Formulas
Huang, Hsin-Mei E.; Witz, Klaus G. – Journal of Curriculum and Teaching, 2013
This study investigated children's understanding of area measurement, including the concept of area and the area formula of a rectangle, as well as their strategic knowledge for solving area measurement problems. Twenty-two fourth-graders from three classes of a public elementary school in Taipei, Taiwan, participated in a one-on-one interview.…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Elementary School Students, Grade 4, Measurement
Acevedo Nistal, A.; Van Dooren, W.; Verschaffel, L. – Educational Psychology, 2014
This study evaluates the effects of an intervention aimed at improving representational flexibility in linear-function problems. Forty-nine students aged 13-16 participated in the study. A pretest-intervention-posttest design with an experimental and control group was used. At pretest, both groups solved a choice test, where they could freely…
Descriptors: Intervention, Experimental Groups, Control Groups, Secondary School Mathematics
Mangulabnan, Pauline Anne Therese M. – Online Submission, 2013
This is a descriptive research on the difficulties of Filipino high school students in translating algebraic word problems into mathematical equations. This research is composed of three parts: (1) development of an 11-page "Filipinized" questionnaire; (2) analysis of the mathematical thinking processes of the respondents based on the answers to…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Misconceptions, Mathematics Education, Mathematical Formulas
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
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
Skurnick, Ronald – Mathematics and Computer Education, 2011
This classroom note is presented as a suggested exercise--not to have the class prove or disprove Goldbach's Conjecture, but to stimulate student discussions in the classroom regarding proof, as well as necessary, sufficient, satisfied, and unsatisfied conditions. Goldbach's Conjecture is one of the oldest unsolved problems in the field of number…
Descriptors: Mathematical Formulas, Numbers, Number Concepts, High School Students
Dixon, Raymond A.; Johnson, Scott D. – Journal of Technology Education, 2012
A cognitive construct that is important when solving engineering design problems is executive control process, or metacognition. It is a central feature of human consciousness that enables one "to be aware of, monitor, and control mental processes." The framework for this study was conceptualized by integrating the model for creative design, which…
Descriptors: Engineering, Novices, Metacognition, Higher Education
Speiser, Robert; Schneps, Matthew H.; Heffner-Wong, Amanda; Miller, Jaimie L.; Sonnert, Gerhard – Journal of Mathematical Behavior, 2012
In school, at least in the US, we were taught to multiply by hand according to a standard algorithm. Most people find that algorithm difficult to use, and many children fail to learn it. We propose a new way to make sense of this difficulty: to treat explicit computation as perceptually supported physical and mental action. Based on recent work in…
Descriptors: Evidence, Mathematics, Urban Schools, Short Term Memory
Foong, S. K. – European Journal of Physics, 2010
This paper was first motivated by the following question: "A pair of twins, R and S, each gives the "same" hard push on a block. R's block is on a rougher floor than S's. Who does more work?" It is shown that S will do more work on his block if there is no constraint on the distance over which the force is applied. On the other hand, if the…
Descriptors: Motion, Physics, Science Instruction, Mathematical Formulas
Srinivasan, V. K. – International Journal of Mathematical Education in Science and Technology, 2011
This article presents different approaches to a problem, dubbed by the author as "the consecutive pages problem". The aim of this teaching-oriented article is to promote the teaching of abstract concepts in mathematics, by selecting a challenging amusement problem and then presenting various solutions in such a way that it can engage the attention…
Descriptors: Problem Sets, Problem Solving, Mathematical Applications, Mathematical Concepts
Murdiyani, Nila Mareta; Zulkardi; Putri, Ratu Ilma Indra; van Eerde, Dolly; van Galen, Frans – Indonesian Mathematical Society Journal on Mathematics Education, 2013
Subtraction has two meanings and each meaning leads to the different strategies. The meaning of "taking away something" suggests a direct subtraction, while the meaning of "determining the difference between two numbers" is more likely to be modeled as indirect addition. Many prior researches found that the second meaning and…
Descriptors: Subtraction, Mathematical Models, Mathematical Formulas, Problem Solving
Garofalo, Joe; Trinter, Christine P. – Mathematics Teacher, 2012
By working through well-designed tasks, students can expand their thinking about mathematical ideas and their approaches to solving mathematical problems. They can come to see the value of looking at tasks from different perspectives and of using different representations. This article discusses four tasks that encourage high school students and…
Descriptors: Mathematics Instruction, Secondary School Mathematics, Mathematical Concepts, Preservice Teacher Education
Naidu, Jaideep T.; Sanford, John F. – American Journal of Business Education, 2011
In a recent paper by Wilamowsky et al. [6], an intuitive proof of the area of the circle dating back to the twelfth century was presented. They discuss challenges made to this proof and offer simple rebuttals to these challenges. The alternative solution presented by them is simple and elegant and can be explained rather easily to non-mathematics…
Descriptors: Mathematical Models, Mathematical Logic, Mathematical Formulas, Intellectual History
Gislason, Eric A.; Craig, Norman C. – Journal of Chemical Education, 2011
Nearly 50 years ago, Henry Bent published his groundbreaking article in this "Journal" introducing the "global" formulation of thermodynamics. In the following years, the global formulation was elaborated by Bent and by one of the present authors. The global formulation of the first law focuses on conservation of energy and the recognition that…
Descriptors: Thermodynamics, Chemistry, Energy, Science Instruction

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