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McAndrew, Alasdair – PRIMUS, 2010
Mathematical induction is one of the major proof techniques taught to mathematics students in the first years of their undergraduate degrees. In addition to its importance to mathematics, induction is also required for computer science and related disciplines. However, even if the concepts of a proof by induction are taught and understood, many…
Descriptors: Logical Thinking, Educational Technology, Algebra, Computer Uses in Education
Burger, Lance – Mathematics Teacher, 2010
Constructivism has constituted a predominant philosophical trend in mathematics education, but its implementation in the classroom has proven to be "far more difficult than the reform community acknowledges". This difficulty may be due in part to administrative cultures that might insist on more procedural types of instruction aimed at testing, in…
Descriptors: Constructivism (Learning), Mathematics Education, Mathematics Activities, Biology
Gould, Doug; Schmidt, Denise A. – Mathematics Teacher, 2010
Story problems are a part of most mathematics curricula and are sometimes used as writing exercises in mathematics classrooms. Such writing exercises may include requiring students to rewrite story problems in their own words, using language that is familiar to them, or rewriting story problems using simpler number facts. The current emphasis on…
Descriptors: Writing Exercises, Mathematical Concepts, Trigonometry, Story Telling
Teuscher, Dawn; Reys, Robert E. – Mathematics Teacher, 2010
How do mathematics teachers introduce the concepts of slope, rate of change, and steepness in their classrooms? Do students understand these concepts as interchangeable or regard them as three different ideas? In this article, the authors report the results of a study of high school Advanced Placement (AP) Calculus students who displayed…
Descriptors: Advanced Placement, Calculus, Misconceptions, Mathematics Instruction
Herron-Thorpe, Farren L.; Olson, Jo Clay; Davis, Denny – Mathematics Teaching in the Middle School, 2010
Toys in the classroom was the result of a National Science Foundation grant that brought two engineering graduate students to a middle school math class. The graduate students and teachers collaborated in an effort to enhance students' mathematical learning. An engineering context was theorized as a way to further develop students' understanding…
Descriptors: Graduate Students, Toys, Engineering, Mathematical Concepts
Moomaw, Sally; Carr, Victoria; Boat, Mary; Barnett, David – Teaching Children Mathematics, 2010
A child's demonstration of his conceptual understanding of number bodes well for his future success in school mathematics. As youngsters' thinking becomes more logical, they apply one-to-one correspondence relationships to quantification. Yet, reliable assessment of young children's mathematical ability is difficult because of social and emotional…
Descriptors: Preschool Curriculum, Mathematics Education, Preschool Children, Accountability
McMillen, Sue; McMillen, Beth – Teaching Children Mathematics, 2010
Connecting stories to qualitative coordinate graphs has been suggested as an effective instructional strategy. Even students who are able to "create" bar graphs may struggle to correctly "interpret" them. Giving children opportunities to work with qualitative graphs can help them develop the skills to interpret, describe, and compare information…
Descriptors: Teaching Methods, Reading Comprehension, Investigations, Graphs
Carraher, David W. – Educational Studies in Mathematics, 2008
Everyday Mathematics has contributed in important ways to long-standing debates about mathematical concepts, symbolic representation, and the role of contexts in thinking--the latter topic reaching back at least as far as Kant's notion of scheme. The descriptive work plays a role, of course. But it is only by making sense of the observations that…
Descriptors: Mathematics Education, Mathematical Concepts, Symbols (Mathematics), Context Effect
Guo, Bai-Ni; Qi, Feng – International Journal of Mathematical Education in Science and Technology, 2008
By using an identity relating to Bernoulli's numbers and power series expansions of cotangent function and logarithms of functions involving sine function, cosine function and tangent function, four inequalities involving cotangent function, sine function, secant function and tangent function are established.
Descriptors: Trigonometry, Mathematics Instruction, Validity, Mathematical Logic
Semadeni, Zbigniew – Educational Studies in Mathematics, 2008
To explicate certain phenomena, e.g., the possibility of deduction without definition, we hypothesize that an individual is able to understand and appreciate reasoning with a due feeling of its necessity when the concept image of each concept involved in the reasoning has reached a certain level of development; we then speak of "deep intuition".…
Descriptors: Intuition, Mathematical Concepts, Logical Thinking, Concept Mapping
Kaune, Christa; Cohors-Fresenborg, Elmar; Nowinska, Edyta – Indonesian Mathematical Society Journal on Mathematics Education, 2011
We report on a German-Indonesian design research project, which aims to significantly increase the mathematical skills of secondary school students. Since results of international comparative studies have shown that there exists a relationship between metacognition and learning success, a learning environment for the beginning with secondary…
Descriptors: Metacognition, Secondary School Students, Mathematics Instruction, Teaching Methods
Stein, Mary Kay; Smith, Margaret – National Council of Teachers of Mathematics, 2011
Learn the 5 practices for facilitating effective inquiry-oriented classrooms: (1) Anticipating what students will do--what strategies they will use--in solving a problem; (2) Monitoring their work as they approach the problem in class; (3) Selecting students whose strategies are worth discussing in class; (4) Sequencing those students'…
Descriptors: Faculty Development, Mathematics Instruction, Teaching Methods, Inquiry
Holtzman, Caren; Susholtz, Lynn – Stenhouse Publishers, 2011
When Caren Holtzman and Lynn Susholtz look around a classroom, they see "a veritable goldmine of mathematical investigations" involving number, measurement, size, shape, symmetry, ratio, and proportion. They also think of the ways great artists have employed these concepts in their depictions of objects and space--for example, Picasso's use of…
Descriptors: Visual Arts, Art Education, Artists, Museums
Daro, Phil; Mosher, Frederic A.; Corcoran, Tom – Consortium for Policy Research in Education, 2011
The concept of learning progressions offers one promising approach to developing the knowledge needed to define the "track" that students may be on, or should be on Learning progressions can inform teachers about what to expect from their students. They provide an empirical basis for choices about when to teach what to whom Learning…
Descriptors: Mathematics Education, Instructional Effectiveness, Learning Processes, Educational Strategies
Collins, Anne; Dacey, Linda – Stenhouse Publishers, 2011
In many ways, algebra can be as challenging for teachers as it is for students. With so much emphasis placed on procedural knowledge and the manipulations of variables and symbols, it can be easy to lose sight of the key ideas that underlie algebraic thinking and the relevance algebra has to the real world. In the The Xs and Whys of Algebra: Key…
Descriptors: Educational Strategies, Symbols (Mathematics), Mathematics Teachers, Algebra

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