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Showing 1 to 15 of 44 results Save | Export
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Erik Tillema; Joseph Antonides – Investigations in Mathematics Learning, 2024
The multiplication principle (MP) is foundational for combinatorial problem-solving. From a units-coordination perspective, applying the MP with justification entails establishing unit relationships between the number of options at each independent stage of a counting process and the total number of combinatorial outcomes. Existing research…
Descriptors: Multiplication, Mathematical Logic, Mathematics Instruction, Problem Solving
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Reed, Zackery; Tallman, Michael A.; Oehrtman, Michael; Carlson, Marilyn P. – PRIMUS, 2022
We present our analysis of 254 Calculus I final exams from U.S. colleges and universities to identify features of assessment items that necessitate qualitatively distinct ways of understanding and reasoning. We explore salient features of exemplary tasks from our data set to reveal distinctions between exam items made apparent by our analytical…
Descriptors: Calculus, College Mathematics, Mathematical Logic, Mathematics Instruction
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Robertson, Robert L. – PRIMUS, 2017
Calculating Laplace transforms from the definition often requires tedious integrations. This paper provides an integration-free technique for calculating Laplace transforms of many familiar functions. It also shows how the technique can be applied to probability theory.
Descriptors: Mathematics Instruction, Teaching Methods, Probability, Computation
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Lockwood, Elise; Caughman, John S., IV – PRIMUS, 2016
To further understand student thinking in the context of combinatorial enumeration, we examine student work on a problem involving set partitions. In this context, we note some key features of the multiplication principle that were often not attended to by students. We also share a productive way of thinking that emerged for several students who…
Descriptors: Mathematics Instruction, College Mathematics, Undergraduate Study, Problem Solving
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Swenson, Daniel – PRIMUS, 2015
We walk through a module intended for undergraduates in mathematics, with the focus of finding the best strategies for competing in the Showcase Showdown on the game show "The Price Is Right." Students should have completed one semester of calculus, as well as some probability. We also give numerous suggestions for further questions that…
Descriptors: Mathematics Instruction, Probability, Calculus, Undergraduate Students
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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
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Jalan, Sukoriyanto; Nusantara, Toto; Subanji, Subanji; Chandra, Tjang Daniel – Educational Research and Reviews, 2016
This study aims to explain the thinking process of students in solving combination problems considered from assimilation and accommodation frameworks. This research used a case study approach by classifying students into three categories of capabilities namely high, medium and low capabilities. From each of the ability categories, one student was…
Descriptors: Thinking Skills, Problem Solving, Cognitive Processes, Models
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Muldoon Brown, Tricia; Kahn, Eric B. – PRIMUS, 2015
This paper presents an extended project that offers, through American football, an application of concepts from enumerative combinatorics and an introduction to proofs course. The questions in this paper and subsequent details concerning equivalence relations and counting techniques can be used to reinforce these new topics to students in such a…
Descriptors: Team Sports, Athletics, Mathematics Instruction, Undergraduate Study
McLean, Tamika Ann – ProQuest LLC, 2017
The current study investigated college students' content knowledge and cognitive abilities as factors associated with their algebra performance, and examined how combinations of content knowledge and cognitive abilities related to their algebra performance. Specifically, the investigation examined the content knowledge factors of computational…
Descriptors: College Students, Knowledge Level, College Mathematics, Mathematics Skills
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Goins, Edray Herber; Washington, Talitha M. – PRIMUS, 2013
We discuss a general formula for the area of the surface that is generated by a graph [t[subscript 0], t[subscript 1] [right arrow] [the set of real numbers][superscript 2] sending t [maps to] (x(t), y(t)) revolved around a general line L : Ax + By = C. As a corollary, we obtain a formula for the area of the surface formed by revolving y = f(x)…
Descriptors: Mathematical Formulas, College Mathematics, Mathematics Instruction, Calculus
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Lu, Yun; Vasko, Francis J.; Drummond, Trevor J.; Vasko, Lisa E. – Mathematics Teacher, 2014
If the prospective students of probability lack a background in mathematical proofs, hands-on classroom activities may work well to help them to learn to analyze problems correctly. For example, students may physically roll a die twice to count and compare the frequency of the sequences. Tools such as graphing calculators or Microsoft Excel®…
Descriptors: Probability, Mathematical Logic, Validity, Heuristics
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Whitacre, Ian; Nickerson, Susan D. – Journal for Research in Mathematics Education, 2016
This study examines how collective activity related to multiplication evolved over several class sessions in an elementary mathematics content course that was designed to foster prospective elementary teachers' number-sense development. We document how the class drew on as-if-shared ideas to make sense of multidigit multiplication in terms of…
Descriptors: Preservice Teachers, Multiplication, Elementary School Teachers, Elementary School Mathematics
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Ehrhardt, George – Journal of Statistics Education, 2013
This dataset contains the results of a quasi-experiment, testing Karl Pearson's "drunkard's walk" analogy for an abstract random walk. Inspired by the alternate hypothesis that drunkards stumble to the side of their dominant hand, it includes data on intoxicated test subjects walking a 10' line. Variables include: the…
Descriptors: Quasiexperimental Design, Logical Thinking, Hypothesis Testing, Handedness
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Aversa, Vincenzo; De Simone, Anna – International Journal of Mathematical Education in Science and Technology, 2012
A well known result due to Laplace states the equivalence between two different ways of defining the determinant of a square matrix. We give here a short proof of this result, in a form that can be presented, in our opinion, at any level of undergraduate studies.
Descriptors: Geometric Concepts, College Mathematics, Undergraduate Study, Mathematics Instruction
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Berkaliev, Zaur; Devi, Shavila; Fasshauer, Gregory E.; Hickernell, Fred J.; Kartal, Ozgul; Li, Xiaofan; McCray, Patrick; Whitney, Stephanie; Zawojewski, Judith S. – PRIMUS, 2014
In the context of a department of applied mathematics, a program assessment was conducted to assess the departmental goal of enabling undergraduate students to recognize, appreciate, and apply the power of computational tools in solving mathematical problems that cannot be solved by hand, or would require extensive and tedious hand computation. A…
Descriptors: Mathematics Instruction, College Mathematics, Undergraduate Study, Program Evaluation
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