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Blaszczyk, Piotr – Mathematics Teaching Research Journal, 2020
Recent educational studies in mathematics seek to justify a thesis that there is a conflict between students' intuitions regarding infinity and the standard theory of infinite numbers. On the contrary, we argue that students' intuitions do not match but to Cantor's theory, not to any theory of infinity. To this end, we sketch ways of measuring…
Descriptors: Mathematics Instruction, Teaching Methods, Mathematical Concepts, Theories
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Burgos, María; Bueno, Seydel; Godino, Juan D.; Pérez, Olga – REDIMAT - Journal of Research in Mathematics Education, 2021
Teaching and learning Calculus concepts and procedures, particularly the definite integral concept, is a challenge for teachers and students in their academic careers. In this research, we supplement the analysis made by different authors, applying the theoretical and methodological tools of the Onto-Semiotic Approach to mathematical knowledge and…
Descriptors: Semiotics, Mathematics Instruction, Teaching Methods, Decision Making
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Oxman, Victor; Stupel, Moshe; Jahangiri, Jay M. – Cogent Education, 2018
The article is dedicated to solving extrema problems in teaching mathematics, without using calculus. We present and discuss a wide variety of mathematical extrema tasks where the extrema are obtained and find their solutions without resorting to differential. Particular attention is paid to the role of arithmetic and geometric means inequality in…
Descriptors: Problem Solving, Mathematics Instruction, Geometric Concepts, Arithmetic
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Barnett, Janet Heine; Lodder, Jerry; Pengelley, David – PRIMUS, 2016
Why would anyone think of teaching and learning mathematics directly from primary historical sources? We aim to answer this question while sharing our own experiences, and those of our students across several decades. We will first describe the evolution of our motivation for teaching with primary sources, and our current view of the advantages…
Descriptors: Mathematics Instruction, Teaching Methods, Primary Sources, Case Studies
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Martínez-Zarzuelo, Angélica; Roanes-Lozano, Eugenio; Fernández-Díaz, María José – International Journal for Technology in Mathematics Education, 2017
The educational laws establish an organization and a grouping of the contents of the educational system they rule. As far as we know, the set of experts who design it neither follow precise objective criteria nor use computer tools. That is why they are not usually rotund. We consider that defining precise objective criteria is the key to develop…
Descriptors: Network Analysis, Secondary School Students, Mathematics Instruction, Teaching Methods
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Dominici, Diego – College Mathematics Journal, 2011
This work introduces a distance between natural numbers not based on their position on the real line but on their arithmetic properties. We prove some metric properties of this distance and consider a possible extension.
Descriptors: Mathematics Instruction, Teaching Methods, Numbers, Arithmetic
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Nunes, Terezinha; Bryant, Peter; Evans, Deborah; Bell, Daniel; Barros, Rossana – Educational Studies in Mathematics, 2012
The basis of this intervention study is a distinction between numerical calculus and relational calculus. The former refers to numerical calculations and the latter to the analysis of the quantitative relations in mathematical problems. The inverse relation between addition and subtraction is relevant to both kinds of calculus, but so far research…
Descriptors: Intervention, Word Problems (Mathematics), Calculus, Subtraction
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Hill, Theodore P.; Morrison, Kent E. – College Mathematics Journal, 2010
This paper surveys the fascinating mathematics of fair division, and provides a suite of examples using basic ideas from algebra, calculus, and probability which can be used to examine and test new and sometimes complex mathematical theories and claims involving fair division. Conversely, the classical cut-and-choose and moving-knife algorithms…
Descriptors: Probability, Calculus, Mathematics Instruction, Algebra
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Mark, June; Cuoco, Al; Goldenberg, E. Paul; Sword, Sarah – Mathematics Teaching in the Middle School, 2010
"Mathematical habits of mind" include reasoning by continuity, looking at extreme cases, performing thought experiments, and using abstraction that mathematicians use in their work. Current recommendations emphasize the critical nature of developing these habits of mind: "Once this kind of thinking is established, students can apply it in the…
Descriptors: Calculus, Arithmetic, Algebra, Mathematics Instruction
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Yost, David – Australian Senior Mathematics Journal, 2008
A derivative is the limit of a quotient. It is an abstraction of division. Since division is harder to understand than multiplication, teachers teach it later, hopefully only after a sound understanding of multiplication has been attained. For the same reason, it may make sense to teach integration first, and move on to differential calculus only…
Descriptors: Calculus, Teaching Methods, Foreign Countries, Mathematics Instruction
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Marchand, R. J.; McDevitt, T. J.; Bosse, Michael J.; Nandakumar, N. R. – PRIMUS, 2007
Many popular mathematical software products including Maple, Mathematica, Derive, Mathcad, Matlab, and some of the TI calculators produce incorrect graphs because they use complex arithmetic instead of "real" arithmetic. This article expounds on this issue, provides possible remedies for instructors to share with their students, and demonstrates…
Descriptors: Computer Software, Arithmetic, Computer Assisted Instruction, Graphs
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Berry, A. J. – AMATYC Review, 2006
As a precursor to lessons on prime decomposition and reducing fractions, rules are generally presented for divisibility by 2, 3, 5, 9, and 10 and sometimes for those popular composites such as 4 and 25. In our experience students often ask: "What about the one for 7?" and we are loathe to simply state that there isn't one. We have yet to see a…
Descriptors: Calculus, Arithmetic, College Mathematics, Mathematics Instruction
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Bradshaw, David M. – PRIMUS, 2004
The United States Military Academy (USMA) has a four course core mathematics curriculum that is studied by all students. The third course is MA205, Calculus II; a multivariate calculus course filled with practical applications. During a Problem Solving Lab (PSL), students participated in a hands-on exercise with multiple vector operations,…
Descriptors: Mathematics Curriculum, Calculus, Mathematical Concepts, College Mathematics
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Conroy, James C.; Davis, Robert A. – Educational Philosophy and Theory, 2002
In this essay, the authors suggest that there is another, different and more ancient way of looking at the moral and social role of the teacher and the processes of education in which she is involved. This alternative perspective draws on older, more imaginative and complex sources of meaning than the latest Gallup poll or the latest adjusted…
Descriptors: Arithmetic, Educational Change, Calculus, Educational Practices
Austin, Joe Dan, Ed. – 1991
This book provides applications for use in the secondary school mathematics curriculum by selecting related articles appearing in the "Mathematics Teacher" during the last 15 years. The articles are grouped into chapters that reflect the main secondary school mathematics courses and categorized by the highest level of mathematics needed…
Descriptors: Algebra, Arithmetic, Calculus, Enrichment Activities
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