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What Works Clearinghouse Rating
Sole, Marla A. – PRIMUS, 2016
Open-ended questions that can be solved using different strategies help students learn and integrate content, and provide teachers with greater insights into students' unique capabilities and levels of understanding. This article provides a problem that was modified to allow for multiple approaches. Students tended to employ high-powered, complex,…
Descriptors: Problem Solving, Mathematics Instruction, Feedback (Response), Teaching Methods
Ramful, Ajay; Ho, Siew Yin; Lowrie, Tom – Mathematics Education Research Journal, 2015
This inquiry presents two fine-grained case studies of students demonstrating different levels of cognitive functioning in relation to bilateral symmetry and reflection. The two students were asked to solve four sets of tasks and articulate their reasoning in task-based interviews. The first participant, Brittany, focused essentially on three…
Descriptors: Spatial Ability, Visualization, Case Studies, Cognitive Ability
Tortop, Hasan Said – Online Submission, 2016
Many educational tools that are recommended for the training of normal students are often encountered in programs that do not work very well and are subsequently abandoned. One of the important points that program developers should now consider is that teaching tools are presented in accordance with individual differences. It is seen that the…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Problem Solving, Experiments, Teaching Methods
Dauer, Jenny M.; Lute, Michelle L.; Straka, Olivia – International Journal of Education in Mathematics, Science and Technology, 2017
We propose two contrasting types of student decision-making based on social and cognitive psychology models of separate mental processes for problem solving. Informal decision-making uses intuitive reasoning and is subject to cognitive biases, whereas formal decision-making uses effortful, logical reasoning. We explored indicators of students'…
Descriptors: Decision Making, Science and Society, Cognitive Processes, Science Process Skills
Yavuz, Ahmet – EURASIA Journal of Mathematics, Science & Technology Education, 2015
This study aims to investigate (1) students' trust in mathematics calculation versus intuition in a physics problem solving and (2) whether this trust is related to achievement in physics in the context of epistemic game theoretical framework. To achieve this research objective, paper-pencil and interview sessions were conducted. A paper-pencil…
Descriptors: Physics, Problem Solving, Mathematics, Intuition
Nelissen, Jo M. C. – Curriculum and Teaching, 2013
The focus of this article is a theoretical discussion and analysis of the concept of intuition. The article investigates how intuition, in the psychological sense, is connected with concepts like problem-solving, reflective thinking, automatized thinking activities and understanding 'gestalt' or structure and meaning. Automatisms are based on…
Descriptors: Intuition, Problem Solving, Reflection, Thinking Skills
Cincinatus, Ronit Bassan; Sheffet, Malka – International Journal of Research in Education and Science, 2016
The ubiquity of the subject of percentages in our everyday life demands that math teachers and pre-service math teachers demonstrate a profound knowledge and thorough understanding of the concept of percentages. This work, which originated from one specific lesson in an 8th grade math class, studies the conceptual understanding and problem-solving…
Descriptors: Mathematics, Mathematics Education, Mathematics Instruction, Mathematical Concepts
Buteler, Laura Maria; Coleoni, Enrique Andrés – Electronic Journal of Science Education, 2014
Solving many quantitative problems does not necessarily lead to an improved Physics understanding. However, physicists, who have learned physics largely through quantitative problems solving, often have a refined physical intuition. Assuming that the refinement of physical intuitions occurs, to a great extent, during problem solving, the question…
Descriptors: Correlation, Physics, Problem Solving, Intuition
Frizlar, Torsten; Rink, Roland – North American Chapter of the International Group for the Psychology of Mathematics Education, 2014
We encounter ratios on a daily basis. They also play an important role as a basic construct of thinking in many areas of school mathematics. For example, a fraction can be interpreted as the ratio of a part to the respective whole. Many children appear to have difficulties with fractions and although the concept of ratios is crucial for this…
Descriptors: Mathematical Concepts, Elementary School Students, Intuition, Fractions
Greenstein, George – Astronomy Education Review, 2013
I discuss a pedagogical strategy in which we ask students to write about science. Such writing is to be done regularly and often, in class and out of class, in the format of brief "letters to a friend" and longer essays. The goal of this technique is not to teach students how to write; it is to use their writing to help them learn the science.…
Descriptors: Teaching Methods, Content Area Writing, Astronomy, Science Instruction
Obersteiner, Andreas; Bernhard, Matthias; Reiss, Kristina – ZDM: The International Journal on Mathematics Education, 2015
Understanding contingency table analysis is a facet of mathematical competence in the domain of data and probability. Previous studies have shown that even young children are able to solve specific contingency table problems, but apply a variety of strategies that are actually invalid. The purpose of this paper is to describe primary school…
Descriptors: Inhibition, Intuition, Mathematics Instruction, Mathematics Skills
Sumarto, Sylvana Novilia; van Galen, Frans; Zulkardi, H.; Darmawijoyo, D. – International Education Studies, 2014
In Indonesia, proportion is being taught formally in Grade 5 (10-11 years old). However, the existing learning approach does not support the development of the students' proportional reasoning. The way to teach proportion by giving cross multiplication is not meaningful for the students. They just memorize the procedure without understanding how…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Logical Thinking, Intuition, Grade 4
Groves, Kevin S.; Vance, Charles M. – Journal of Creative Behavior, 2015
Building upon previously developed and more general dual-process models, this paper provides empirical support for a multidimensional thinking style construct comprised of linear thinking and multiple dimensions of nonlinear thinking. A self-report assessment instrument (Linear/Nonlinear Thinking Style Profile; LNTSP) is presented and…
Descriptors: Cognitive Style, Measures (Individuals), Measurement Techniques, Business Administration Education
Chen, Ying; Irving, Paul W.; Sayre, Eleanor C. – Physical Review Special Topics - Physics Education Research, 2013
Previous research into problem solving in physics resulted in researchers introducing six epistemic games to describe the organizational structures of locally coherent resources. We present a new epistemic game--the "answer-making epistemic game"--which was identified in this paper through the analysis of interviews carried out to validate a…
Descriptors: Physics, Educational Games, Epistemology, Problem Solving
Van Stockum, Charles A., Jr.; DeCaro, Marci S. – Journal of Problem Solving, 2014
Individual differences in working memory capacity (WMC) increase the ability and tendency to devote greater attentional control to a task--improving performance on a wide range of skills. In addition, recent research on enclothed cognition demonstrates that the situational influence of wearing a white lab coat increases controlled attention, due…
Descriptors: Problem Solving, Short Term Memory, Attention Control, Intuition

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