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Dorko, Allison; Lockwood, Elise – North American Chapter of the International Group for the Psychology of Mathematics Education, 2016
This paper considers what students attend to as they first encounter R[superscript 3] coordinate axes and are asked to graph y = 3. Graphs are critical representations in single and multivariable calculus, yet findings from research indicate that students struggle with graphing functions of more than one variable. We found that some students…
Descriptors: Graphs, Mathematics Instruction, Mathematical Concepts, College Mathematics
Lockwood, Elise; Reed, Zackery; Caughman, John S., IV – North American Chapter of the International Group for the Psychology of Mathematics Education, 2015
The multiplication principle is a fundamental principle in enumerative combinatorics. It underpins many of the counting formulas students learn, and it provides much-needed justification for why counting works as it does. However, given its importance, the way in which it is presented in textbooks is surprisingly varied. In this paper, we document…
Descriptors: Mathematics Instruction, Multiplication, College Mathematics, Textbooks
Lockwood, Elise – North American Chapter of the International Group for the Psychology of Mathematics Education, 2013
Counting problems have applications in probability and computer science, and they provide rich contexts for problem solving. Such problems are accessible to students, but subtleties can arise that make them surprisingly difficult to solve. In this paper, students' work on the Groups of Students problem is presented, and an important issue related…
Descriptors: Computation, Problem Solving, Multiplication, College Students