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Mónica Arnal-Palacián; Francisco J. Claros-Mellado; María T. Sánchez-Compaña – Pythagoras, 2024
The purpose of this article is to conduct a mathematical and phenomenological comparison of three concepts: (1) the finite limit of a function at a point, (2) the finite limit of a sequence, and (3) the infinite limit of a sequence. Additionally, we aim to analyse the presence of these concepts in Spanish textbooks. The methodology employed is…
Descriptors: Phenomenology, Textbooks, Mathematics Instruction, Teaching Methods
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Burke, Jon; Goukasian, Levon; Shearer, Robert – Journal of Statistics Education, 2020
Students often struggle with the concept of dependence of events or random variables. We present a simple coin flipping game that yields surprising results due to the dependencies within the game. The game is simple enough for young children to understand and play, yet complex enough to yield results that are counterintuitive to even most graduate…
Descriptors: Statistics Education, Teaching Methods, Games, Problem Solving
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Eckman, Derek; Roh, Kyeong Hah – North American Chapter of the International Group for the Psychology of Mathematics Education, 2022
This paper describes our work to determine the naturalistic images that first-time second-semester university calculus students possess for series convergence. We found that the students we interviewed most frequently determined whether a series converged by imagining a process of appending summands into a running total and examining whether this…
Descriptors: Intuition, Mathematics Instruction, Undergraduate Students, Learning Processes
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Nikiforidou, Zoi; Jones, Jennie – Statistics Education Research Journal, 2023
Young children encounter uncertainty and challenges on a daily basis; through their intuitions, experiences and experimentation they construct knowledge, skills and dispositions towards probabilistic concepts. The aim of this exploratory ethnographic study is to identify how young children engage with probabilistic thinking and reasoning while…
Descriptors: Play, Preschool Children, Outdoor Education, Problem Solving
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Burgos, María; Bueno, Seydel; Godino, Juan D.; Pérez, Olga – REDIMAT - Journal of Research in Mathematics Education, 2021
Teaching and learning Calculus concepts and procedures, particularly the definite integral concept, is a challenge for teachers and students in their academic careers. In this research, we supplement the analysis made by different authors, applying the theoretical and methodological tools of the Onto-Semiotic Approach to mathematical knowledge and…
Descriptors: Semiotics, Mathematics Instruction, Teaching Methods, Decision Making
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Reit, Xenia-Rosemarie; Schäfer, Marc – Journal on Mathematics Education, 2020
It remains a challenge for teachers to integrate modeling tasks in everyday mathematics classes. Many studies have been conducted that show the difficulties faced by teachers. One of the challenging aspects in this regard is that of assessment. In the present study, a connection between structures of learners' solution strategies and cognitive…
Descriptors: Teaching Methods, Mathematics Instruction, Mathematical Models, Problem Solving
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Sochacki, James S.; Thelwell, Roger; Tongen, Anthony – PRIMUS, 2019
How should our students think about external forcing in differential equations setting, and how can we help them gain intuition? To address this question, we share a variety of problems and projects that explore the dynamics of the undamped forced spring-mass system. We provide a sequence of discovery-based exercises that foster physical and…
Descriptors: Calculus, Mathematics Instruction, Mathematical Models, Problem Solving
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Brady, Corey E.; Borromeo Ferri, Rita; Lesh, Richard A. – Investigations in Mathematics Learning, 2022
Mathematical modeling is a challenging and creative process. If one considers only interim or final solutions to modeling problems or interviews modelers afterward, often only their "explicit" models are accessible -- those expressed in work products or evinced in verbal and written reflections. The inner world of tacit knowledge and its…
Descriptors: Mathematics Instruction, Teaching Methods, Mathematical Models, Case Studies
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Leron, Uri; Ejersbo, Lisser Rye – International Journal of Mathematical Education in Science and Technology, 2021
Research in psychology and in mathematics education has documented the ubiquity of "intuition traps" -- tasks that elicit non-normative responses from most people. Researchers in cognitive psychology often view these responses negatively, as a sign of irrational behaviour. Others, notably mathematics educators, view them as necessary…
Descriptors: Mathematics Instruction, Intuition, Teaching Methods, Error Patterns
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Bao, Lei; Koenig, Kathleen; Xiao, Yang; Fritchman, Joseph; Zhou, Shaona; Chen, Cheng – Physical Review Physics Education Research, 2022
Abilities in scientific thinking and reasoning have been emphasized as core areas of initiatives, such as the Next Generation Science Standards or the College Board Standards for College Success in Science, which focus on the skills the future will demand of today's students. Although there is rich literature on studies of how these abilities…
Descriptors: Physics, Science Instruction, Teaching Methods, Thinking Skills
Walkington, Candace; Woods, Dawn; Nathan, Mitchell J.; Chelule, Geoffrey; Wang, Min – Grantee Submission, 2019
Gestures are associated with powerful forms of understanding; however, their causative role in mathematics reasoning is less clear. We inhibit college students' gestures by restraining their hands, and examine the impact on language, recall, intuition, and mathematical justifications of geometric conjectures. We test four mutually exclusive…
Descriptors: Teaching Methods, Nonverbal Communication, Mathematics Instruction, College Students
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Stapleton, Andrew J. – Cultural Studies of Science Education, 2018
In response to the authors, I demonstrate how threshold concepts offer a means to both contextualise teaching and learning of quantum physics and help transform students into the culture of physics, and as a way to identify particularly troublesome concepts within quantum physics. By drawing parallels from my own doctoral research in another area…
Descriptors: Quantum Mechanics, Physics, Science Education, Imagery
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Sisk, Dorothy A. – Gifted Education International, 2016
This article will share the intellectual journey E. Paul Torrance and I traveled in 2001, in which we explored psychology, science and ancient wisdom and traditions, including Native American and indigenous traditions, to establish a foundation for spiritual intelligence. This section will be followed by ways to develop and nurture spiritual…
Descriptors: Spiritual Development, Intuition, Visualization, Problem Solving
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Dickman, Benjamin – Mathematics Teacher, 2016
Guessing, for Pólya, is an important way of getting an initial handle on a mathematical problem. An argument can be made to place guessing in any one of the first three steps of the four-step approach to problem solving as described in "How to Solve It" (Pólya 1945). It could be a part of understanding the problem, devising a plan, or…
Descriptors: Problem Solving, Mathematics Instruction, Calculus, Fractions
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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
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