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Alexandra List – Journal of Experimental Education, 2024
Students' evidence-based reasoning was examined across two studies. In Study 1, students were asked to evaluate newspaper excerpts including anecdotal, descriptive, correlational, and causal evidence provided in support of causal claims as well as to justify their quality ratings for two of these excerpts. In Study 2, students' justifications for…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Thinking Skills, Abstract Reasoning, Logical Thinking
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Michael D. Hicks – Educational Studies in Mathematics, 2024
Despite the prominence of analogies in mathematics, little attention has been given to exploring students' processes of analogical reasoning, and even less research exists on revealing how students might be empowered to independently and productively reason by analogy to establish new (to them) mathematics. I argue that the lack of a cohesive…
Descriptors: Logical Thinking, Mathematics Skills, Mathematics Education, Algebra
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Jérôme Proulx – International Journal of Science and Mathematics Education, 2024
In their recent article on teachers' proportional reasoning, Copur-Gencturk et al. (2022) draw attention to a type of strategy that they call "relative", lodged right between additive and multiplicative thinking. This strategy raised interest in our research team, as it aligned well and helped give stronger meaning to some strategies…
Descriptors: Logical Thinking, Mathematics Skills, Addition, Multiplication
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Mustafa Sami Topçu; Kristen Bethke Wendell; Chelsea Joy Andrews – Journal of Science Education and Technology, 2024
Mechanistic reasoning about an artifact or system involves thinking about its underlying entities and the properties, activities, and cause-effect relationships of those entities. Previous studies of children's mechanistic reasoning about engineering solutions have mostly focused on specific mechanical systems such as gear trains. Yet there is…
Descriptors: Elementary School Students, Abstract Reasoning, Logical Thinking, Engineering
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González-Espada, Wilson J.; Gallenstein, Kathryn; Collins, Katelyn – Physics Teacher, 2022
The use of analogies is a well-known teaching strategy to bridge unfamiliar and familiar concepts. However, analogies may become ineffective if the familiar concept is not familiar anymore. For example, this may occur when we describe rotational sense as clockwise and counterclockwise, assuming students know how to read a clock with hour and…
Descriptors: Students, Logical Thinking, Learning Strategies, Concept Formation
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Supply, Anne-Sophie; Vanluydt, Elien; Van Dooren, Wim; Onghena, Patrick – Educational Studies in Mathematics, 2023
Findings on children's proportional reasoning abilities strongly vary across studies. This might be due to the different contexts that can be used in proportional problems: fair-sharing, mixtures, and probability. A review of the scientific literature suggests that the context of proportional problems may not only impact the difficulty of the…
Descriptors: Abstract Reasoning, Thinking Skills, Young Children, Problem Solving
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Menno van Calcar – Analytic Teaching and Philosophical Praxis, 2024
Teaching syllogistic reasoning is often perceived as teaching pupils the purely formal rules of deductive inference. According to this common conception, such reasoning is a highly abstract skill, one that is carried out by the processing of syntactically encoded representations of the premises. This paper argues that syllogistic reasoning may,…
Descriptors: High School Students, High School Teachers, Logical Thinking, Critical Thinking
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Fotou, Nikolaos; Abrahams, Ian – Research in Science & Technological Education, 2023
Background: The use of analogies as reasoning tools that play a key role in human cognition at all ages has been of interest to educators, scientists, and philosophers ever since Aristotle. Indeed, research has consistently found that analogies provided by teachers can, and do, play an important role in facilitating student understanding of…
Descriptors: Logical Thinking, Prediction, Abstract Reasoning, Novelty (Stimulus Dimension)
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Schang, Andy; Dew, Matthew; Stump, Emily M.; Holmes, N. G.; Passante, Gina – Physical Review Physics Education Research, 2023
Uncertainty is an important and fundamental concept in physics education. Students are often first exposed to uncertainty in introductory labs, expand their knowledge across lab courses, and then are introduced to quantum mechanical uncertainty in upper-division courses. This study is part of a larger project evaluating student thinking about…
Descriptors: College Students, Thinking Skills, Logical Thinking, Abstract Reasoning
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Henry Markovits; Valerie A. Thompson – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition, 2023
Mental model (Johnson-Laird, 2001) and probabilistic theories (Oaksford & Chater, 2009) claim to provide distinct explanations of human reasoning. However, the dual strategy model of reasoning suggests that this distinction corresponds to different reasoning strategies, termed "counterexample" and "statistical,"…
Descriptors: Abstract Reasoning, Thinking Skills, Learning Strategies, Logical Thinking
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Ahmed, Ayesha; Howe, Christine; Major, Louis; Hennessy, Sara; Mercer, Neil; Warwick, Paul – International Journal of Research & Method in Education, 2022
As part of an investigation into the relationship between classroom dialogue and student outcome, a test of reasoning has been developed that is suitable for preadolescents (i.e. c.10-13-year-olds). Building on previous work but expanding this considerably, the test focuses upon four areas of reasoning: differentiation of facts from opinions,…
Descriptors: Preadolescents, Foreign Countries, Abstract Reasoning, Logical Thinking
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Hayes, Brett K.; Stephens, Rachel G.; Lee, Michael D.; Dunn, John C.; Kaluve, Anagha; Choi-Christou, Jasmine; Cruz, Nicole – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition, 2022
Much recent research and theorizing in the field of reasoning has been concerned with intuitive sensitivity to logical validity, such as the logic-brightness effect, in which logically valid arguments are judged to have a "brighter" typeface than invalid arguments. We propose and test a novel signal competition account of this…
Descriptors: Abstract Reasoning, Logical Thinking, Intuition, Comprehension
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Meyer-Grant, Constantin G.; Cruz, Nicole; Singmann, Henrik; Winiger, Samuel; Goswami, Spriha; Hayes, Brett K.; Klauer, Karl Christoph – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition, 2023
An ongoing debate in the literature on human reasoning concerns whether or not the logical status (valid vs. invalid) of an argument can be intuitively detected. The finding that conclusions of logically valid inferences are liked more compared to conclusions of logically invalid ones--called the logic-liking effect--is one of the most prominent…
Descriptors: Logical Thinking, Abstract Reasoning, Intuition, Inferences
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Mark A. Creager – Australian Mathematics Education Journal, 2023
Mark Creager noticed that how we teach students to reason mathematically may be counter-productive to our teaching goals. Sometimes a linear approach, focusing on sub-processes leading to a proof works well. But not always. Students should be made aware that reasoning is not always a straight forward process, but one filled with false starts and…
Descriptors: Secondary School Students, Mathematical Concepts, Mathematics Instruction, Logical Thinking
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Prayitno, Lydia Lia; Purwanto, P.; Subanji, S.; Susiswo, S.; Mutianingsih, Ninik – Journal of Research and Advances in Mathematics Education, 2022
Semantic is associated with the relationship between symbol, reference, and the problem's context involved in the problem-solving process which also involves reasoning and decision-making. Hence, this study describes the characteristics of students' semantic reasoning to solve the double discounts problem. 51 high school students in Sidoarjo…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, High School Students, Abstract Reasoning, Problem Solving
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