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Swanson, Christopher – College Mathematics Journal, 2005
The author describes a card trick that failed when he tried it with the student chapter at his university. Computations show that the chance of this happening is about 1 in 25.
Descriptors: Probability, Mathematics Instruction, College Mathematics, Computation
Melrose, Tim; Scott, Paul – Australian Mathematics Teacher, 2005
This article discusses prime numbers, defined as integers greater than 1 that are divisible only by only themselves and the number 1. A positive integer greater than 1 that is not a prime is called composite. The number 1 itself is considered neither prime nor composite. As the name suggests, prime numbers are one of the most basic but important…
Descriptors: National Security, Numbers, Mathematics Instruction, Technology
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Murphy, Carol – Educational Studies in Mathematics, 2004
This study provides an in-depth analysis of children's use of a taught mental calculation strategy. Three children (aged eight to nine years) who demonstrated contrasting spontaneous calculation approaches, were interviewed following the direct instruction of a calculation strategy. Their responses are explored in relation to constructivist and…
Descriptors: Constructivism (Learning), Mental Computation, Children, Arithmetic
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Dana, Jason; Dawes, Robyn M. – Journal of Educational and Behavioral Statistics, 2004
Some simple, nonoptimized coefficients (e.g., correlation weights, equal weights) were pitted against regression in extensive prediction competitions. After drawing calibration samples from large supersets of real and synthetic data, the researchers observed which set of sample-derived coefficients made the best predictions when applied back to…
Descriptors: Prediction, Social Sciences, Computation, Regression (Statistics)
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Newman, Isadore; McNeil, Keith; Fraas, John – Mid-Western Educational Researcher, 2004
This article presents two methods of estimating a study's replicability that researchers should consider reporting along with their statistical significant and effect size findings. One method of estimating the replicability of the findings deals with replication in the exact same system. The second method, which may contain subjective probability…
Descriptors: Replication (Evaluation), Computation, Researchers, Documentation
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Schlesinger, Matthew – Developmental Science, 2004
The emerging field of Evolutionary Computation (EC), inspired by neo-Darwinian principles (e.g. natural selection, mutation, etc.), offers developmental psychologists a wide array of mathematical tools for simulating ontogenetic processes. In this brief review, I begin by highlighting three of the approaches that EC researchers employ (Artificial…
Descriptors: Developmental Psychology, Child Development, Artificial Intelligence, Computation
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Fay, Temple H. – International Journal of Mathematical Education in Science and Technology, 2002
We investigate the pendulum equation [theta] + [lambda][squared] sin [theta] = 0 and two approximations for it. On the one hand, we suggest that the third and fifth-order Taylor series approximations for sin [theta] do not yield very good differential equations to approximate the solution of the pendulum equation unless the initial conditions are…
Descriptors: Equations (Mathematics), Calculus, Computation, Mathematics Instruction
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Iqbal, M. – International Journal of Mathematical Education in Science and Technology, 2002
In this paper we have converted the Laplace transform into an integral equation of the first kind of convolution type, which is an ill-posed problem, and used a statistical regularization method to solve it. The method is applied to three examples. It gives a good approximation to the true solution and compares well with the method given by…
Descriptors: Applied Linguistics, Computation, Equations (Mathematics), Mathematics
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Mohanty, R. K.; Arora, Urvashi – International Journal of Mathematical Education in Science and Technology, 2002
Three level-implicit finite difference methods of order four are discussed for the numerical solution of the mildly quasi-linear second-order hyperbolic equation A(x, t, u)u[subscript xx] + 2B(x, t, u)u[subscript xt] + C(x, t, u)u[subscript tt] = f(x, t, u, u[subscript x], u[subscript t]), 0 less than x less than 1, t greater than 0 subject to…
Descriptors: Computer Uses in Education, Equations (Mathematics), Mathematics Education, Computation
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Joarder, Anwar H. – International Journal of Mathematical Education in Science and Technology, 2003
An attempt is made to put the notion of sample quartiles on a mathematical footing in the light of ranks of observations, and equisegmentation property that the quartiles divide ordered sample observations into four segments leaving the same number of observations in each if all the observations are distinct. Sample quartiles provided by the…
Descriptors: Arithmetic, Computation, Statistics, Mathematics Education
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Follows, Mike – Physics Education, 2003
It is shown that highly elliptical orbits, such as those of comets, can be explained well in terms of energy rather than forces. The principle of conservation of energy allows a comet's velocity to be calculated at aphelion and perihelion. An example asks students to calculate whether they can run fast enough to escape from a small asteroid.…
Descriptors: Energy, Astronomy, Science Instruction, Physics
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Osler, Thomas J.; Tsay, Jeffrey – Mathematics and Computer Education, 2005
In this paper, the authors evaluate the series and integrals presented by P. Glaister. The authors show that this function has the Maclauren series expansion. The authors derive the series from the integral in two ways. The first derivation uses the technique employed by Glaister. The second derivation uses a change in variable in the integral.
Descriptors: Mathematics, Mathematics Education, Calculus, Data Analysis
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Wilde, Elizabeth Ty; Hollister, Robinson – Journal of Policy Analysis and Management, 2007
In recent years, propensity score matching (PSM) has gained attention as a potential method for estimating the impact of public policy programs in the absence of experimental evaluations. In this study, we evaluate the usefulness of PSM for estimating the impact of a program change in an educational context (Tennessee's Student Teacher Achievement…
Descriptors: Public Policy, Achievement Tests, Scores, Class Size
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Briggs, Derek C.; Wilson, Mark – Journal of Educational Measurement, 2007
An approach called generalizability in item response modeling (GIRM) is introduced in this article. The GIRM approach essentially incorporates the sampling model of generalizability theory (GT) into the scaling model of item response theory (IRT) by making distributional assumptions about the relevant measurement facets. By specifying a random…
Descriptors: Markov Processes, Generalizability Theory, Item Response Theory, Computation
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Ghosh, Satyajit; Ghosh, Sarah – Journal of College Teaching & Learning, 2007
Principle of duality and numerical calculation of income and substitution effects under Hicksian Compensation are often left out of intermediate microeconomics courses because they require a rigorous calculus based analysis. But these topics are critically important for understanding consumer behavior. In this paper we use excel solver--a…
Descriptors: Economics Education, Microeconomics, Consumer Economics, Calculus
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