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Crispim, Carolina Martins; Mizuno, Gabriel Perez; Pizzinga, Adrian – International Journal of Mathematical Education in Science and Technology, 2021
Take a family of independent events. If some of these events, or all of them, are replaced by their complements, then independence still holds. This fact, which is agreed upon by the members of the statistical/probability communities, is tremendously well known, is fairly intuitive and has always been frequently used for easing probability…
Descriptors: Probability, Statistics, Validity, Mathematical Logic
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Derrick, Josephine; Champion, Joe; Uriarte, Ramey – Mathematics Teacher: Learning and Teaching PK-12, 2022
The authors present a new classroom-tested lesson that was designed to engage students in the joy of mathematical inquiry through a card game, Frustration, while building number sense, understanding of uncertainty, statistical reasoning, and discourse skills. The purpose in developing and sharing these lessons is to highlight how games of chance…
Descriptors: Game Based Learning, Mathematics Instruction, Inquiry, Mathematical Concepts
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Joshua, Surani; Drimalla, James; Horne, Dru; Lavender, Heather; Yon, Alexandra; Byerley, Cameron; Yoon, Hyunkyoung; Moore, Kevin – Mathematics Teacher: Learning and Teaching PK-12, 2022
To facilitate people using mathematical reasoning to compare risks associated with the COVID-19 pandemic, the National Science Foundation (NSF) funded the COViD-TASER (Creation of Visualizations of Data: The Application of STEM Education Research) research team to create the COVID-19 Relative Risk Tool (RRT). The RRT uses an interactive bar chart…
Descriptors: Mathematics Instruction, Mathematical Logic, Risk, COVID-19
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Meyer, Joerg M. – Teaching Statistics: An International Journal for Teachers, 2018
The contrary of stochastic independence splits up into two cases: pairs of events being favourable or being unfavourable. Examples show that both notions have quite unexpected properties, some of them being opposite to intuition. For example, transitivity does not hold. Stochastic dependence is also useful to explain cases of Simpson's paradox.
Descriptors: Intuition, Probability, Randomized Controlled Trials, Statistical Analysis
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Jones, Joshua David – Mathematics Teacher: Learning and Teaching PK-12, 2022
To be literate in a society where the information shared online is often exploited, learners should be exposed to multiple aspects of contemporary predictive modeling. This article explores an activity in which grade 10 students learned how a famous AI algorithm (the Apriori algorithm) uses conditional probability to automate the process of…
Descriptors: Mathematics Instruction, Teaching Methods, Grade 10, High School Students
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Shen, Zhuping – Mathematics Teacher, 2018
Finding intersections, unions, and complements of sets is an essential issue in elementary mathematics. It builds the foundation for set theory, probability, logic, and other topics. It is commonly recognized that drawing a Venn diagram, which was first introduced by the British philosopher and mathematician John Venn in 1881, is a classic and…
Descriptors: Mathematics Instruction, Teaching Methods, Visual Aids, Problem Solving
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Gerstenschlager, Natasha E.; Strayer, Jeremy F. – Mathematics Teaching in the Middle School, 2019
Teachers often use number talks at the beginning of class to hear the ways that students understand mathematical topics so that they can base future instruction on student thinking. Students who engage in number talks become accustomed to thinking about mathematics in multiple ways, sharing their thoughts and critiquing the thoughts of others. The…
Descriptors: Numbers, Statistics, Probability, Mathematics Instruction
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Dupont, Brandon; Durham, Yvonne – Journal of Economic Education, 2018
The authors describe how the Monty Hall Dilemma, a well-known choice anomaly, can be demonstrated with a simple and versatile classroom experiment. In addition to demonstrating the anomaly, the experiment can be used to introduce students to some institutional modifications that have been shown to ameliorate it. This experiment, which can be…
Descriptors: Class Activities, Educational Experiments, Mathematical Logic, Classroom Techniques
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Paolillo, Bonaventura; Rizzo, Piermichele; Vincenzi, Giovanni – International Journal of Mathematical Education in Science and Technology, 2017
In this paper, we give possible suggestions for a classroom lesson about an application of probability using basic mathematical notions. We will approach to some combinatoric results without using "induction", "polynomial identities" nor "generating functions", and will give a proof of the "Vandermonde…
Descriptors: Probability, Mathematical Logic, Validity, Foreign Countries
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Cook, Joshua; Lynch, Collin F.; Hicks, Andrew G.; Mostafavi, Behrooz – International Educational Data Mining Society, 2017
BKT and other classical student models are designed for binary environments where actions are either correct or incorrect. These models face limitations in open-ended and data-driven environments where actions may be correct but non-ideal or where there may even be degrees of error. In this paper we present BKT-SR and RKT-SR: extensions of the…
Descriptors: Models, Bayesian Statistics, Data Use, Intelligent Tutoring Systems
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Robertson, Robert L. – PRIMUS, 2017
Calculating Laplace transforms from the definition often requires tedious integrations. This paper provides an integration-free technique for calculating Laplace transforms of many familiar functions. It also shows how the technique can be applied to probability theory.
Descriptors: Mathematics Instruction, Teaching Methods, Probability, Computation
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Swenson, Daniel – PRIMUS, 2015
We walk through a module intended for undergraduates in mathematics, with the focus of finding the best strategies for competing in the Showcase Showdown on the game show "The Price Is Right." Students should have completed one semester of calculus, as well as some probability. We also give numerous suggestions for further questions that…
Descriptors: Mathematics Instruction, Probability, Calculus, Undergraduate Students
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Rash, Agnes M.; Fillebrown, Sandra – PRIMUS, 2016
This article describes various courses designed to incorporate mathematical proofs into courses for non-math and non-science majors. These courses, nicknamed "math beauty" courses, are designed to discuss one topic in-depth rather than to introduce many topics at a superficial level. A variety of courses, each requiring students to…
Descriptors: Mathematics Curriculum, General Education, Mathematics Instruction, Mathematics Education
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Matsumoto, Paul S.; Cao, Jiankang – Journal of Chemical Education, 2017
Computational thinking is a component of the Science and Engineering Practices in the Next Generation Science Standards, which were adopted by some states. We describe the activities in a high school chemistry course that may develop students' computational thinking skills by primarily using Excel, a widely available spreadsheet software. These…
Descriptors: Secondary School Science, High School Students, Computation, Thinking Skills
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Taylor, Merilyn; Hawera, Ngarewa – Australian Primary Mathematics Classroom, 2016
Rich learning tasks embedded within a familiar context allow students to work like mathematicians while making sense of the mathematics. This article demonstrates how 11-12 year-old students were able to employ all of the proficiency strands while demonstrating a deep understanding of some of the "big ideas" of probabilistic thinking.
Descriptors: Probability, Educational Games, Mathematics, Mathematics Education
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