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How Access to Definitions Influences the Representations and Conceptual Insights Used in Student Arguments

Citation

Nielsen, Annelise Winifred. (2023-08). How Access to Definitions Influences the Representations and Conceptual Insights Used in Student Arguments. Theses and Dissertations Collection, University of Idaho Library Digital Collections. https://www.lib.uidaho.edu/digital/etd/items/nielsen_idaho_0089e_12674.html

Title:
How Access to Definitions Influences the Representations and Conceptual Insights Used in Student Arguments
Author:
Nielsen, Annelise Winifred
Date:
2023-08
Keywords:
Argument Conceptual Insight General Representations Proof Proof Construction Structure
Program:
Mathematics & Statistical Sci
Subject Category:
Mathematics education
Abstract:

This study sought to explore whether access to definitions and general representations influences the construction of general direct arguments. Data was collected in college mathematics courses for prospective elementary school teachers. Participant arguments were analyzed along two variables: the generality of the representations and the viability of the conceptual insight they included. Participants were given one of three proving tasks. One task included no definitions, one task included definitions in the conceptual register, and the third task included definitions in the symbolic register. A randomized block design was used to explore the relationship between the definitions and the two variables. Qualitative methods were used to explore how participants intended their arguments. This study found that: 1) the inclusion of definitions on proving tasks does not have a substantial influence on the generality of the arguments or the viability of the conceptual insight used and 2) examples and algebraic representations were used as placeholders to demonstrate a procedure and to stand for the domain as a class of objects. The findings also indicate that the manner in which students are generalizing about the domain of the claim determines the structure of the domain they attend to, the conceptual insights available to them, and thus their ability to construct a viable argument. Future research is needed to connect the existing understanding of actions that support student generalization to supporting students in developing viable general direct proof.

Description:
doctoral, Ph.D., Mathematics & Statistical Sci -- University of Idaho - College of Graduate Studies, 2023-08
Major Professor:
Ely, Robert
Committee:
Amador, Julie; Williams, Chris; Hall, William; Abo, Hirotachi
Defense Date:
2023-08
Identifier:
Nielsen_idaho_0089E_12674
Type:
Text
Format Original:
PDF
Format:
application/pdf

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