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Rafi' Safadi; Nadera Hawa – Mathematics Teacher: Learning and Teaching PK-12, 2025
Graded Troubleshooting (GTS) is a powerful routine that teachers can use easily to engender students' metacognitive thinking and boost their understanding of mathematics concepts and procedures. This article describes a new GTS activity designed to prompt students to efficiently exploit worked examples when asked to diagnose erroneous examples…
Descriptors: Mathematics Education, Mathematics Instruction, Problem Solving, Troubleshooting
Green, Kimberly M.; Ferrell, Lantz – Journal of Instructional Pedagogies, 2023
Functions and formulas in spreadsheets provide an instructional opportunity to help students build their skills in identifying errors in their own work and identifying a path to go about correcting the errors. This paper provides examples of functions and equations used to create two approaches to calculating the solution to one problem, such as a…
Descriptors: Spreadsheets, Problem Solving, Error Patterns, Error Correction
Lucy A. Watson; Elizabeth B. Harkey; Angela T. Barlow – Mathematics Teacher: Learning and Teaching PK-12, 2024
Barlow et al. (2018) discussed three types of mistakes worthy of inspection: procedural errors, inappropriate solution processes, and misconceptions. Here, the authors focus on procedural errors, as these often led the teachers in their professional development project to limit their inspection of mistakes to correcting. Despite this narrow focus,…
Descriptors: Mathematics Instruction, Misconceptions, Teaching Methods, Error Patterns
Palisse, Jennifer; Robinson, Travis – Australian Mathematics Education Journal, 2022
The authors describe and discuss an activity in which primary school students were instructed how to use graph theory to solve a spatial puzzle. This activity was aligned with the design principles of vicarious failure. They discuss how this impacted the type of dialogue observed in the classroom and found that students were more likely to focus…
Descriptors: Error Correction, Elementary School Students, Mathematics Education, Foreign Countries
Katie Steckles; Claire Ketnor; Ros Porter; Alex Shukie; Alexander S. Corner – Teaching Mathematics and Its Applications, 2025
Due to the nature of the teaching environment, students may often develop perceptions of their lecturers' ability as mathematicians, based on the pre-prepared and well-rehearsed content they present. In reality, performing mathematical calculations and solving problems is a difficult skill, and students may compare their own experiences…
Descriptors: College Faculty, Undergraduate Students, Mathematics Instruction, Mathematics Skills
Lischka, Alyson E.; Gerstenschlager, Natasha E.; Stephens, D. Christopher; Strayer, Jeremy F.; Barlow, Angela T. – Mathematics Teacher, 2018
Mistakes can be a source of frustration for teachers and students in mathematics classrooms because they reveal potential misunderstandings or a lack of learning. However, increasing evidence shows that making mistakes creates productive pathways for learning new ideas and building new concepts (Boaler 2016; Borasi 1996). Learning through…
Descriptors: Mathematics Instruction, Error Patterns, Teaching Methods, Homework
Pace, Michelle H.; Ortiz, Enrique – Teaching Children Mathematics, 2016
When a second-grade class struggled to make sense of the algorithms for multidigit addition and subtraction, attitude and morale were down, and student discourse was at an all-time low. When daily mathematics class started, the teacher was hearing an overall class moan. The instructed needed to turn it around, to find a way to help excite and…
Descriptors: Mathematics Instruction, Grade 2, Elementary School Mathematics, Teaching Methods
Seeley, Cathy L. – Educational Leadership, 2017
The traditional method of teaching math--showing students how to do a procedure, then assigning problems that require them to use that exact procedure--leads to adults who don't know how to approach problems that don't look like those in their math book. Seeley describes an alternative teaching method (upside-down teaching) in which teachers give…
Descriptors: Mathematics Instruction, Teaching Methods, Problem Solving, Models
Khovanova, Tanya – College Mathematics Journal, 2012
When Martin Gardner first presented the Two-Children problem, he made a mistake in its solution. Later he corrected the error, but unfortunately the incorrect solution is more widely known than his correction. In fact, a Tuesday-Child variation of this problem went viral in 2010, and the same flaw keeps reappearing in proposed solutions of that…
Descriptors: Mathematics, Probability, Problem Solving, Error Correction
Lange, Karin E.; Booth, Julie L.; Newton, Kristie J. – Mathematics Teacher, 2014
For students to be successful in algebra, they must have a truly conceptual understanding of key algebraic features as well as the procedural skills to complete a problem. One strategy to correct students' misconceptions combines the use of worked example problems in the classroom with student self-explanation. "Self-explanation" is the…
Descriptors: Algebra, Mathematics Instruction, Problem Solving, Mathematics Skills
Chepko, Stevie; Doan, Robert – Journal of Physical Education, Recreation & Dance, 2015
This article focuses on establishing a mastery climate where all students find success and start on the road to physical literacy. Using a five-step approach, physical educators will be offered guidance for developing practice tasks that lead to skill mastery. These steps include creating a mastery environment, designing deliberate practice tasks,…
Descriptors: Skill Development, Mastery Learning, Critical Thinking, Problem Solving
Lim, Kien H. – Mathematics Teaching in the Middle School, 2014
Student errors are springboards for analyzing, reasoning, and justifying. The mathematics education community recognizes the value of student errors, noting that "mistakes are seen not as dead ends but rather as potential avenues for learning." To induce specific errors and help students learn, choose tasks that might produce mistakes.…
Descriptors: Secondary School Mathematics, Middle School Students, Error Patterns, Error Correction
Coppola, Brian P.; Pontrello, Jason K. – Journal of Chemical Education, 2014
Using errors as a method of learning has been made explicit through a two-staged peer review and discussion. During organic chemistry discussion sessions, quizzes are followed by a structured peer review designed to help students identify and discuss student errors. After the face-to-face discussion, a second stage of review involves analyzing and…
Descriptors: Peer Evaluation, Tests, Organic Chemistry, Discussion (Teaching Technique)
Poulsen, John – Online Submission, 2012
Student teachers make errors in their practicum. Then, they learn and fix those errors. This is the standard arc within a successful practicum. Some students make errors that they do not fix and then make more errors that again remain unfixed. This downward spiral increases in pace until the classroom becomes chaos. These students at the…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Student Teaching, Student Teachers, Practicums
Richards, Kate; Davies, Neville – Teaching Statistics: An International Journal for Teachers, 2012
This article tackles the problem of what should be done with real textual data that are contaminated by errors of recording, particularly when the data contain words that are misspelt, unintentionally or otherwise. (Contains 5 tables and 2 figures.)
Descriptors: Error Analysis (Language), Error of Measurement, Research Problems, Statistics
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