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Paul Scovazzo – Chemical Engineering Education, 2025
Simplifying equations via assumptions is integral to the "engineering method." Algebraic scaling helps in teaching the engineering skill of making good assumptions. Algebraic scaling is more than a pedagogical tool. It can create a solution where one was not possible before scaling. Scaling helps in engineering proper design…
Descriptors: Algebra, Scaling, Engineering Education, Mathematics Skills
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Cody L. Patterson; Paul Christian Dawkins; Holly Zolt; Anthony Tucci; Kristen Lew; Kathleen Melhuish – PRIMUS, 2024
This article presents an inquiry-oriented lesson for teaching Lagrange's theorem in abstract algebra. This lesson was developed and refined as part of a larger grant project focused on how to "Orchestrate Discussions Around Proof" (ODAP, the name of the project). The lesson components were developed and refined with attention to how well…
Descriptors: Mathematics Instruction, Algebra, Validity, Mathematical Logic
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Luis E. Hernández-Zavala; Claudia Acuña-Soto; Vicente Liern – International Electronic Journal of Mathematics Education, 2025
Students often instrumentally use variables and unknowns without considering the variational thinking behind them. Using parameters to modify the coefficients or unknowns in equations or systems of linear equations (without altering their structure) involves consciously incorporating variational thinking into problem-solving. We will test the…
Descriptors: Equations (Mathematics), Mathematical Applications, Undergraduate Students, Problem Solving
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Jeffrey Ehme – PRIMUS, 2024
The Miller-Rabin test is a useful probabilistic method for finding large primes. In this paper, we explain the method in detail and give three variations on this test. These variations were originally developed as student projects to supplement a course in error correcting codes and cryptography.
Descriptors: Probability, Numbers, Coding, Algorithms
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Nataly Pincheira; Ángel Alsina – International Journal of Science and Mathematics Education, 2025
This study analyzes the mathematical knowledge to teach early algebra exhibited by pre-service early childhood education teachers, from the perspective of the Mathematical Knowledge for Teaching (MKT) model. The research adopts a mixed exploratory-descriptive methodological approach, based on the application of the MKT-early algebra questionnaire…
Descriptors: Preservice Teachers, Early Childhood Teachers, Mathematics Teachers, Pedagogical Content Knowledge
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Michael D. Hicks – PRIMUS, 2024
Analogy has played an important role in developing modern mathematics. However, it is unclear to what extent students are granted opportunities to productively reason by analogy. This article proposes a set of lessons for introducing topics in ring theory that allow students to engage with the process of reasoning by analogy while exploring new…
Descriptors: Mathematics Instruction, Mathematical Logic, Logical Thinking, Algebra
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Heather Lynn Johnson; Courtney Donovan; Robert Knurek; Kristin A. Whitmore; Livvia Bechtold – Educational Studies in Mathematics, 2024
Using a mixed methods approach, we explore a relationship between students' graph reasoning and graph selection via a fully online assessment. Our population includes 673 students enrolled in college algebra, an introductory undergraduate mathematics course, across four U.S. postsecondary institutions. The assessment is accessible on computers,…
Descriptors: Models, Graphs, Cognitive Processes, Abstract Reasoning
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Hortensia Soto; Jessi Lajos; Alissa Romero – PRIMUS, 2024
We describe how an instructor integrated embodiment to teach the Fundamental Homomorphism Theorem (FHT) and preliminary concepts in an undergraduate abstract algebra course. The instructor's use of embodiment reduced levels of abstraction for formal definitions, theorems, and proofs. The instructor's simultaneous use of various forms of embodiment…
Descriptors: Mathematics Instruction, Algebra, Undergraduate Students, Mathematical Concepts
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Ahmad Khalid Mowahed; Jawed Ahmad Mayar – Mathematics Teaching Research Journal, 2023
In this study, we aimed to find problematic and supportive issues in Afghan undergraduate students' proofs of the irrationality of [square root]3 and [square root]5/8 while using the indirect proof method. Collecting and analyzing produced proofs of 30 sophomore and 48 senior undergraduate students on the irrationality of [square root]3 and…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Undergraduate Students, Mathematical Logic, Validity
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Margherita Piroi – Educational Studies in Mathematics, 2025
This study aims at elaborating a well-established theoretical framework that distinguishes three modes of thinking in linear algebra: the analytic-arithmetic, the synthetic-geometric, and the analytic-structural mode. It describes and analyzes the bundle of signs produced by an engineering student during an interview, where she was asked to recall…
Descriptors: Undergraduate Students, Engineering Education, Case Studies, Algebra
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María Burgos; Nicolás Tizón-Escamilla; Jorhan Chaverri – International Electronic Journal of Mathematics Education, 2025
This paper describes the design, implementation, and results of a training action with prospective primary education teachers, focusing on the creation of problems involving proportional and algebraic reasoning. Prospective teachers must solve a proportionality problem using both arithmetic and algebraic procedures, and then vary it to motivate…
Descriptors: Thinking Skills, Algebra, Mathematics Instruction, Preservice Teachers
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Gary A. Olson; Heather Lynn Johnson; Rebecca Robinson; Robert Knurek; Kristin A. Whitmore – PRIMUS, 2024
Inverse and injective functions are topics in most college algebra courses. Yet, current materials and course structures may not afford students' conceptual understanding of these important ideas. We describe how students' work with digital activities, "techtivities," linking two different looking graphs that represent relationships…
Descriptors: College Mathematics, Algebra, Mathematics Instruction, Mathematical Concepts
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Joshua Holden – PRIMUS, 2024
This paper describes Alkaline, a size-reduced version of Kyber, which has recently been announced as a prototype NIST standard for post-quantum public-key cryptography. While not as simple as RSA, I believe that Alkaline can be used in an undergraduate classroom to effectively teach the techniques and principles behind Kyber and post-quantum…
Descriptors: Technology, Coding, Undergraduate Study, Algebra
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Mark McCartney – International Journal of Mathematical Education in Science and Technology, 2024
Four variations of the Koch curve are presented. In each case, the similarity dimension, area bounded by the fractal and its initiator, and volume of revolution about the initiator are calculated. A range of classroom exercises are proved to allow students to investigate the fractals further.
Descriptors: Mathematical Concepts, Computation, Equations (Mathematics), Geometric Concepts
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Kurt VanLehn; Fabio Milner; Chandrani Banerjee; Jon Wetzel – International Journal of Artificial Intelligence in Education, 2024
An algebraic model uses a set of algebraic equations to describe a situation. Constructing such models is a fundamental skill, but many students still lack the skill, even after taking several algebra courses in high school and college. For such students, we developed instruction that taught students to decompose the to-be-modelled situation into…
Descriptors: Algebra, Mathematical Models, Low Achievement, Mathematics Instruction
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