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Selden, Annie; Selden, John; Benkhalti, Ahmed – PRIMUS, 2018
Many mathematics departments have instituted transition-to-proof courses for second semester sophomores to help them learn how to construct proofs and to prepare them for proof-based courses, such as abstract algebra and real analysis. We have developed a way of getting students, who often stare at a blank piece of paper not knowing what to do, to…
Descriptors: Undergraduate Students, College Mathematics, Mathematics Education, Mathematical Logic
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Fisher, Brian – PRIMUS, 2016
This paper describes the development of an instructional sequence designed to allow students to reinvent the definition of sequence convergence in an introductory proof course. The sequence follows a heuristic of guided reinvention that encourages students to independently create their own mathematical definitions. This case study reports on how…
Descriptors: Teaching Methods, Mathematics Instruction, Mathematical Logic, Validity
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Barnes, Julie – PRIMUS, 2011
Several years ago, the author noticed that her students were having trouble understanding the formal definitions for convergence of sequences, continuity of functions, and uniform convergence of functions. To her students, these definitions were just a bunch of symbols with little to no meaning. She drew diagrams, but students had trouble seeing…
Descriptors: Mathematics Instruction, College Mathematics, Mathematical Concepts, Manipulative Materials
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Shipman, Barbara A. – PRIMUS, 2012
Differences in definitions of limit and continuity of functions as treated in courses on calculus and in rigorous undergraduate analysis yield contradictory outcomes and unexpected language. There are results about limits in calculus that are false by the definitions of analysis, functions not continuous by one definition and continuous by…
Descriptors: Comparative Analysis, Calculus, Mathematics Instruction, Undergraduate Study
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Barnes, Julie – PRIMUS, 2007
This paper is essentially a story that can be used to help students understand some of the definitions found in a standard introductory real analysis course.
Descriptors: Definitions, Fairy Tales, Calculus, Mathematics Instruction
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Fernandez, Eileen – PRIMUS, 2004
This paper describes a sequence of lessons from two Calculus I classes for teaching the epsilon-delta definition of a limit. In these lessons, the author elicited students' misconceptions and perceptions of this definition through a reading/writing lesson and then used these student ideas to design a lesson aimed at addressing these misconceptions…
Descriptors: Concept Formation, Calculus, Misconceptions, College Mathematics
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Gass, Frederick – PRIMUS, 2006
Most beginning calculus courses spend little or no time on a technical definition of the limit concept. In most of the remaining courses, the definition presented is the traditional epsilon-delta definition. An alternative approach that bases the definition on infinite sequences has occasionally appeared in commercial textbooks but has not yet…
Descriptors: Calculus, Definitions, Scientific Concepts, Mathematical Concepts