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50 Years of ERIC
50 Years of ERIC
The Education Resources Information Center (ERIC) is celebrating its 50th Birthday! First opened on May 15th, 1964 ERIC continues the long tradition of ongoing innovation and enhancement.

Learn more about the history of ERIC here. PDF icon

Showing 1 to 15 of 28 results
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Mamona-Downs, Joanna K.; Megalou, Foteini J. – Journal of Mathematical Behavior, 2013
The aim of this paper is to examine students' understanding of the limiting behavior of a function from [set of real numbers][superscript 2] to [set of real numbers] at a point "P." This understanding depends on which definition is used for a limit. Several definitions are considered; two of these concern the notion of a neighborhood of "P", while…
Descriptors: Mathematics, Numbers, Comprehension, College Students
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Ko, Yi-Yin; Knuth, Eric J. – Journal of Mathematical Behavior, 2013
Validating proofs and counterexamples across content domains is considered vital practices for undergraduate students to advance their mathematical reasoning and knowledge. To date, not enough is known about the ways mathematics majors determine the validity of arguments in the domains of algebra, analysis, geometry, and number theory--the domains…
Descriptors: Mathematical Logic, Validity, Majors (Students), Undergraduate Students
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Cangelosi, Richard; Madrid, Silvia; Cooper, Sandra; Olson, Jo; Hartter, Beverly – Journal of Mathematical Behavior, 2013
The purpose of this study was to determine whether or not certain errors made when simplifying exponential expressions persist as students progress through their mathematical studies. College students enrolled in college algebra, pre-calculus, and first- and second-semester calculus mathematics courses were asked to simplify exponential…
Descriptors: Numbers, Algebra, Calculus, College Mathematics
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Fukawa-Connelly, Timothy – Journal of Mathematical Behavior, 2012
This paper is a case study of the teaching of an undergraduate abstract algebra course with a particular focus on the manner in which the students presented proofs and the class engaged in a subsequent discussion of those proofs that included validating the work. This study describes norms for classroom work that include a set of norms that the…
Descriptors: Mathematics Instruction, Algebra, Case Studies, College Mathematics
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Dawkins, Paul Christian – Journal of Mathematical Behavior, 2012
This study presents how the introduction of a metaphor for sequence convergence constituted an experientially real context in which an undergraduate real analysis student developed a property-based definition of sequence convergence. I use elements from Zandieh and Rasmussen's (2010) Defining as a Mathematical Activity framework to trace the…
Descriptors: Student Needs, Figurative Language, Mathematics Instruction, Mathematical Concepts
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Yopp, David A. – Journal of Mathematical Behavior, 2011
The paper examines the roles and purposes of proof mentioned by university research faculty when reflecting on their own teaching and teaching at their institutions. Interview responses from 14 research mathematicians and statisticians who also teach are reported. The results suggest there is a great deal of variation in the role and purpose of…
Descriptors: Undergraduate Study, Mathematics Teachers, Mathematics Instruction, Validity
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Gerson, Hope; Bateman, Elizabeth – Journal of Mathematical Behavior, 2010
Authority roles among teachers and students have traditionally been hierarchal and centered with the expertise and power of the teacher limiting opportunities for students to act with autonomy to build and justify mathematics. In this paper we discuss authority roles for teachers and students that have been realized in an inquiry-based university,…
Descriptors: Calculus, Teacher Student Relationship, Inquiry, Mathematics Instruction
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Speer, Natasha M.; Smith, John P., III; Horvath, Aladar – Journal of Mathematical Behavior, 2010
Though written accounts of collegiate mathematics teaching exist (e.g., mathematicians' reflections and analyses of learning and teaching in innovative courses), research on collegiate teachers' actual classroom teaching practice is virtually non-existent. We advance this claim based on a thorough review of peer-reviewed journals where scholarship…
Descriptors: College Instruction, Calculus, Teaching Methods, Mathematics Instruction
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Zandieh, Michelle; Rasmussen, Chris – Journal of Mathematical Behavior, 2010
The purpose of this paper is to further the notion of defining as a mathematical activity by elaborating a framework that structures the role of defining in student progress from informal to more formal ways of reasoning. The framework is the result of a retrospective account of a significant learning experience that occurred in an undergraduate…
Descriptors: Instructional Design, Mathematics Education, Learning Experience, Geometry
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Larsen, Sean – Journal of Mathematical Behavior, 2009
The purpose of this paper is to describe the process by which a pair of undergraduate students, participating in a teaching experiment, reinvented (with guidance) the concepts of group and isomorphism beginning with an exploration of the symmetries of an equilateral triangle. The intent of this description is to highlight some important insights…
Descriptors: Undergraduate Students, Concept Formation, Geometric Concepts, Mathematics Instruction
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Ko, Yi-Yin; Knuth, Eric – Journal of Mathematical Behavior, 2009
In advanced mathematical thinking, proving and refuting are crucial abilities to demonstrate whether and why a proposition is true or false. Learning proofs and counterexamples within the domain of continuous functions is important because students encounter continuous functions in many mathematics courses. Recently, a growing number of studies…
Descriptors: Majors (Students), Mathematics Instruction, Mathematical Logic, Validity
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Alcock, Lara; Inglis, Matthew – Journal of Mathematical Behavior, 2009
Weber (2009) suggested that counterexamples can be generated by a syntactic proof production, apparently contradicting our earlier assertion (Alcock & Inglis, 2008). Here we point out that this ostensible difference is the result of Weber working with theoretical definitions that differ slightly from ours. We defend our approach by arguing that…
Descriptors: Mathematics Instruction, Mathematical Logic, Validity, Probability
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Lavigne, Nancy C.; Salkind, Sara J.; Yan, Jie – Journal of Mathematical Behavior, 2008
We report a case study that explored how three college students mentally represented the knowledge they held of inferential statistics, how this knowledge was connected, and how it was applied in two problem solving situations. A concept map task and two problem categorization tasks were used along with interviews to gather the data. We found that…
Descriptors: Concept Mapping, College Students, Comprehension, Mathematical Concepts
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Rasmussen, Chris; Kwon, Oh Nam – Journal of Mathematical Behavior, 2007
To improve undergraduate mathematics learning, teachers need to recognize and value characteristics of classroom learning environments that contribute to powerful student learning. The broad goal of this special issue is to share such characteristics and the theoretical and empirical grounding for an innovative approach in differential equations…
Descriptors: Equations (Mathematics), Mathematics Instruction, Inquiry, Teaching Methods
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Marrongelle, Karen – Journal of Mathematical Behavior, 2007
The purpose of this paper is to present evidence supporting the conjecture that graphs and gestures may function in different capacities depending on whether they are used to develop an algorithm or whether they extend or apply a previously developed algorithm in a new context. I illustrate these ideas using an example from undergraduate…
Descriptors: Mathematics Education, Graphs, Equations (Mathematics), Nonverbal Communication
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