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Mekonnen, Adugna; Reznichenko, Nataliya – Online Submission, 2007
Today's college ACCUPLACER System's Computerized Placement Test (CPT) plays a major role for determining whether post-secondary students are ready for placement into Arithmetic, Elementary Algebra, Intermediate Algebra, or College Mathematics courses. It is widely used in most college systems in the U.S. This paper discusses some of the issues to…
Descriptors: College Mathematics, Validity, Mathematics Tests, Arithmetic
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Williams, Peter B.; Howell, Scott L.; Laws, R. Dwight; Metheny, Emily – Online Journal of Distance Learning Administration, 2006
The researchers of this study selected four pragmatic research questions that distance learning administrators with high-enrolling Independent Study courses, similar to those that Brigham Young University offers through its Department of Independent Study, may be interested in exploring. These questions included: (1) When tutoring services are…
Descriptors: Distance Education, Tutoring, Tutors, Tutorial Programs
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Nelson, C. Van; Leganza, Krystina K. – College and University, 2006
Gender was investigated along with other academic variables as predictors of success in entry-level freshman courses from liberal arts mathematics through calculus. The female students were more successful than the male students in all the courses, but gender became less significant as the sophistication level of the course increased. (Contains 16…
Descriptors: Predictor Variables, Mathematics Achievement, College Mathematics, College Freshmen
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Cook, Darwyn – Mathematics and Computer Education, 2006
For those instructors lacking artistic skills, teaching 3-dimensional calculus can be a challenge. Although some instructors spend a great deal of time working on their illustrations, trying to get them just right, students nevertheless often have a difficult time understanding some of them. To address this problem, the author has written a series…
Descriptors: Calculus, Mathematics Achievement, Computation, Problem Solving
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Ayoub, Ayoub B. – Mathematics and Computer Education, 2006
In this article, the author takes up the special trinomial (1 + x + x[squared])[superscript n] and shows that the coefficients of its expansion are entries of a Pascal-like triangle. He also shows how to calculate these entries recursively and explicitly. This article could be used in the classroom for enrichment. (Contains 1 table.)
Descriptors: Geometric Concepts, Correlation, Mathematical Formulas, Mathematics
Farrell, Elizabeth F. – Chronicle of Higher Education, 2006
Math anxiety is an affliction that causes several intelligent students to believe, mistakenly, that they lack the ability to master the subject. Professors are starting to question their teaching tactics in hopes of tackling math anxiety, with some educators looking at ways to make their classes more interactive, while others are considering…
Descriptors: Mathematics Anxiety, Problem Sets, Student Attitudes, Mathematics Instruction
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Cheng, Dorothy; Walters, Matthew – Australasian Journal of Peer Learning, 2009
The Peer-Assisted Learning (PAL) program at the University of Minnesota has drawn from the best practices of Supplemental Instruction, Peer-Led Team Learning, Structured Learning Assistance, the Emerging Scholars Program, and other successful postsecondary peer cooperative learning models to establish guiding principles for structuring learning…
Descriptors: Mathematics Instruction, Peer Teaching, Program Effectiveness, College Mathematics
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Weinstein, Gideon L. – Mathematics and Computer Education, 2004
Not too many years ago the author started out to study the students' own perspectives on their experience with the intent to answer the question, "How do college remedial math students define success, and what are they striving for in their math classes?" The author did not quite manage to answer such a grand question, but did gain some very…
Descriptors: College Mathematics, Algebra, Mathematics Instruction, Student Attitudes
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Gonzalez-Martin, Alejandro S.; Camacho, Matias – International Journal of Mathematical Education in Science and Technology, 2004
This paper analyses the answers of a group of first-year university Mathematics students to a questionnaire, with the aim of determining the difficulties they have when carrying out non-routine tasks related to improper integrals. The questionnaire consisted of nine questions including not only calculus tasks and determining the convergence of…
Descriptors: College Mathematics, Higher Education, Calculus, Mathematics Education
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Cupillari, Antonella – PRIMUS, 2004
It is an eye opening experience for students to find out that even a great mathematician like Leibniz made mistakes, forgot to check carefully his calculations, and was temporarily misled by user-friendly but incorrect formulas. From Leibniz's mishap with the derivation of the rules of differentiation students can learn the importance of spending…
Descriptors: Mathematics Instruction, College Mathematics, Mathematics Skills, Error Correction
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Groetsch, C. W. – College Mathematics Journal, 2005
Resistance destroys symmetry. In this note, a graphical exploration serves as a guide to a rigorous elementary proof of a specific asymmetry in the trajectory of a point projectile in a medium offering linear resistance.
Descriptors: College Mathematics, Mathematics Instruction, Validity, Mathematical Logic
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Falbo, Clement – College Mathematics Journal, 2005
Many assertions about the occurrence of the golden ratio phi in art, architecture, and nature have been shown to be false, unsupported, or misleading. For instance, we show that the spirals found in sea shells, in particular the "Nautilus pompilius," are not in the shape of the golden ratio, as is often claimed. Some of the most interesting…
Descriptors: Mathematical Concepts, Mathematics Instruction, College Mathematics, Numbers
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Grovei, Larry – College Mathematics Journal, 2005
The five Platonic solids are constructed (as graphs) from their rotational symmetry groups. The constructions are based on an idea of Bertram Kostant and are quite simple; conjugacy classes in the group are the vertices of the graphs and products determine adjacency.
Descriptors: Mathematics Activities, Graphs, Geometric Concepts, Mathematics Instruction
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Bridger, Mark; Zelevinsky, Andrei – College Mathematics Journal, 2005
Within the set of points in the plane with integer coordinates, one point is said to be visible from another if no other point in the set lies between them. This study of visibility draws in topics from a wide variety of mathematical areas, including geometry, number theory, probability, and combinatorics.
Descriptors: Number Concepts, Probability, Mathematics Instruction, Mathematical Concepts
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Janji, Milan – International Journal of Mathematical Education in Science & Technology, 2005
A short proof of Laplace's expansion theorem is given. The proof is elementary and can be presented at any level of undergraduate studies where determinants are taught. It is derived directly from the definition so that the theorem may be used as a starting point for further investigation of determinants.
Descriptors: Mathematics Education, Theories, College Mathematics, Undergraduate Study
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