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Advances in Mathematics Education Research on Proof and Proving : An International Perspective
Advances in Mathematics Education Research on Proof and Proving : An International Perspective
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ISBN No.: 9783319709956
Pages: xi, 301
Year: 201801
Format: Trade Cloth (Hard Cover)
Price: $ 234.59
Dispatch delay: Dispatched between 7 to 15 days
Status: Available

Preface Andreas J. Stylianides*; Guershon Harel as899@cam.ac.uk THEME 1: EPISTEMOLOGICAL ISSUES RELATED TO PROOF AND PROVING Chapter 1. Reflections on proof as explanation Gila Hanna - gila.hanna@utoronto.ca Chapter 2. Working on proofs as contributing to conceptualization - The case of IR completeness Viviane Durand-Guerrier*; Denis Tanguay viviane.


durand-guerrier@umontpellier.fr Chapter 3. Types of epistemological justifications, with particular reference to complex numbers Guershon Harel harel@math.ucsd.edu Chapter 4. Mathematical argumentation in elementary teacher education: The key role of the cultural analysis of the content Paolo Boero*; Giuseppina Fenaroli; Elda Guala boero@dima.unige.it Chapter 5.


Toward an evolving theory of mathematical practice informing pedagogy: What standards for this research paradigm should we adopt? Keith Weber*; Paul Dawkins keith.weber@gse.rutgers.edu THEME 2: CLASSROOM-BASED ISSUES RELATED TO PROOF AND PROVING Chapter 6. Constructing and validating the solution to a mathematical problem: The teacher''s prompt Maria Alessandra Mariotti*; Manuel Goizueta mariotti21@unisi.it Chapter 7. Addressing key and persistent problems of students'' learning: The case of proof Andreas J. Stylianides*; Gabriel J.


Stylianides as899@cam.ac.uk Chapter 8. How can a teacher support students in constructing a proof? Bettina Pedemonte bettina.pedemonte@sjsu.edu Chapter 9. Proof validation and modification by example generation: A classroom-based intervention in secondary school geometry Kotaro Komatsu*; Tomoyuki Ishikawa; Akito Narazaki kkomatsu@shinshu-u.ac.


jp Chapter 10. Classroom-based issues related to proofs and proving Ruhama Even ruhama.even@weizmann.ac.il THEME 3: COGNITIVE AND CURRICULAR ISSUES RELATED TO PROOF AND PROVING Chapter 11. Mathematical argumentation in pupils'' written dialogues Gjert-Anders Askevold; Silke Lekaus* slek@hib.no Chapter 12. The need for "linearity" of deductive logic: An examination of expert and novice proving processes Shiv Smith Karunakaran karunak3@msu.


edu Chapter 13. Reasoning-and-proving in algebra in school mathematics textbooks in Hong Kong Kwong-Cheong Wong*; Rosamund Sutherland wongkwongcheong@gmail.com Chapter 14. Irish teachers'' perceptions of reasoning-and-proving amidst a national educational reform Jon D. Davis jon.davis@wmich.edu Chapter 15. About the teaching and learning of proof and proving: Cognitive issues, curricular issues and beyond Lianghuo Fan*; Keith Jones l.


fan@southampton.ac.uk THEME 4: ISSUES RELATED TO THE USE OF EXAMPLES IN PROOF AND PROVING Chapter 16. How do pre-service teachers rate the conviction, verification and explanatory power of different kinds of proofs? Leander Kempen kempen@khdm.de Chapter 17. When is a generic argument a proof? David Reid*; Estela Vallejo Vargas dreid@math.uni-bremen.de Chapter 18.


Systematic exploration of examples as proof: Analysis with four theoretical frameworks Orly Buchbinder orly.buchbinder@unh.edu Chapter 19. Using examples of unsuccessful arguments to facilitate students'' reflection on their processes of proving Yosuke Tsujiyama*; Koki Yui tsujiyama@chiba-u.jp Chapter 20. Genericity, conviction, and conventions: Examples that prove and examples that don''t prove Orit Zaslavsky orit.zaslavsky@nyu.edu.



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