55 research outputs found
Student perspectives on the relationship between a curve and its tangent in the transition from Euclidean Geometry to Analysis
The tangent line is a central concept in many mathematics and science courses. In this paper we describe a model of studentsâ thinking â concept images as well as ability in symbolic manipulation â about the tangent line of a curve as it has developed through studentsâ experiences in Euclidean Geometry and Analysis courses. Data was collected through a questionnaire administered to 196 Year 12 students. Through Latent Class Analysis, the participants were classified in three hierarchical groups representing the transition from a Geometrical Global perspective on the tangent line to an Analytical Local perspective. In the light of this classification, and through qualitative explanations of the studentsâ responses, we describe studentsâ thinking about tangents in terms of seven factors. We confirm the model constituted by these seven factors through Confirmatory Factor Analysis
Using resource graphs to represent conceptual change
We introduce resource graphs, a representation of linked ideas used when
reasoning about specific contexts in physics. Our model is consistent with
previous descriptions of resources and coordination classes. It can represent
mesoscopic scales that are neither knowledge-in-pieces or large-scale concepts.
We use resource graphs to describe several forms of conceptual change:
incremental, cascade, wholesale, and dual construction. For each, we give
evidence from the physics education research literature to show examples of
each form of conceptual change. Where possible, we compare our representation
to models used by other researchers. Building on our representation, we
introduce a new form of conceptual change, differentiation, and suggest several
experimental studies that would help understand the differences between
reform-based curricula.Comment: 27 pages, 14 figures, no tables. Submitted for publication to the
Physical Review Special Topics Physics Education Research on March 8, 200
Development of intuitive rules: Evaluating the application of the dual-system framework to understanding children's intuitive reasoning
This is an author-created version of this article. The original source of publication is Psychon Bull Rev. 2006 Dec;13(6):935-53
The final publication is available at www.springerlink.com
Published version: http://dx.doi.org/10.3758/BF0321390
the interplay of rationality and identity in a mathematical group work
This contribution originates from a joint work aimed at networking theoretical tools and employ them to better understand teaching and learning episodes, with a special focus on mathematical group work. In a socio-cultural perspective, two theoretical lenses are combined: the construct of rational behavior, initially developed by Habermas and adapted in mathematics education, and that of identity. In this paper we propose a general description of our approach and present the main findings emerged after investigations in grade 6 (group work on negative numbers) and grade 4 (arithmetics problem solving). The networked analysis sheds light into mathematical group works: the students' mathematical identities turn into prevailing dimensions of rational behavior and the interplay of dimensions of rationality affects the participation into the group activity. Moreover, the teacher is shown to have a role in students' identifying process, affecting indirectly the students' participation
Misconceptions in Primary Numbers
Proceedings to SEMT â07 are
registered in Thomson Reuters Conference Proceedings Citation Index (ISI Web of Science)
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