2,109 results
Search Results
2. The Effects of Using Information and Communication Technologies Instead of Traditional Paper Based Test, During the Examination Process, on Students with Dyslexia.
- Author
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Anestis, Elmas
- Subjects
COMMUNICATION strategies ,DISABILITIES ,DYSLEXIA ,STUDENTS ,EDUCATION - Abstract
Dyslexia is a type of Specific Learning Disability (SLD) that affects the educational development of a student, as it is the reason of difficulties not only in writing or reading but also in other disciplines like Mathematics. Research has proven that Information and Communication Technologies (ICT) can have a positive effect to the educational development of a dyslexic student. In this paper, twenty 6 th -grade primary-school students were observed while using computers during exams - ten with Dyslexia and ten with no SLDs. All students were called to solve a digital test and a paper test that were including some basic mathematic operations. The researcher recorded and examined the differences between the results from the two tests. Descriptive and deductive statistical analysis showed that students had better results when examined via a computer compared to a traditional written examination. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. 4: Exploring Curvature with Paper Models.
- Author
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Iseri, Howard T.
- Subjects
CURVATURE ,CURVES ,GEOMETRY ,MATHEMATICS ,POLYGONS ,HYPERBOLIC geometry - Abstract
The article explores curvature with paper models. It states that to study both Euclidean and non-Euclidean geometries discovered by Janos Bolyai, Nikolai Lobachevsky and Bernhard Riemann as curved surfaces, a concept of curvature dating to Carl Friendrich Gauss is used by differential geometers. It examines how the curvature of curves and surfaces is related to the angles of polygons or polygonal curves and solid angles at the vertices of polyhedra. Examples of paper models that use Descartes' version of curvature to explore hyperbolic and elliptic figures in a precise and accessible way are presented.
- Published
- 2009
4. Türkiye'de Sayı Duyusu Konusunda Yapılan Çalışmalara İlişkin Tematik İçerik Analizi.
- Author
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BİRGİN, Osman and PEKER, Elif Seval
- Subjects
QUANTITATIVE research ,RESEARCH methodology ,CONFERENCE papers ,THEMATIC analysis ,CONTENT analysis ,CLASSIFICATION - Abstract
Copyright of Hacettepe University Journal of Education is the property of Hacettepe University Journal of Education and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. TRTO MAUDIT OU TRJADE FĖCONDE ? LE CAS DU JEU «PIERRE-FEUILLE-CISEAUX».
- Author
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Parlebas, Pierre
- Subjects
ZERO sum games ,MONADS (Mathematics) ,GAMES for two ,SOCIOLOGY ,MATHEMATICS - Abstract
Copyright of Mathématiques & Sciences Humaines is the property of Editions du CNRS and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. Research from Beijing University of Technology Provide New Insights into Nanotechnology (Removal of Hexavalent Chromium in Aqueous Solution by Cellulose Filter Paper Loaded with Nano-Zero-Valent Iron: Performance Investigation and Numerical...).
- Abstract
Keywords: Health and Medicine; Mathematics; Nanotechnology; Numerical Modeling; Public Health EN Health and Medicine Mathematics Nanotechnology Numerical Modeling Public Health 5190 5190 1 03/23/23 20230303 NES 230303 2023 MAR 3 (NewsRx) -- By a News Reporter-Staff News Editor at Health & Medicine Week -- Current study results on nanotechnology have been published. For more information on this research see: Removal of Hexavalent Chromium in Aqueous Solution by Cellulose Filter Paper Loaded with Nano-Zero-Valent Iron: Performance Investigation and Numerical Modeling. [Extracted from the article]
- Published
- 2023
7. Recent Findings in Nonlinear Science and Numerical Simulation Described by Researchers from University of Sao Paulo (Paper the Local Behavior Around Switching Planes In a Mathematical Model To Chemoimmunotherapy).
- Abstract
Keywords: Ribeirao Preto; Brazil; South America; Nonlinear Science and Numerical Simulation; Drugs and Therapies; Health and Medicine; Mathematics; Therapy EN Ribeirao Preto Brazil South America Nonlinear Science and Numerical Simulation Drugs and Therapies Health and Medicine Mathematics Therapy 1316 1316 1 06/05/23 20230609 NES 230609 2023 JUN 9 (NewsRx) -- By a News Reporter-Staff News Editor at Immunotherapy Weekly -- Investigators discuss new findings in Mathematics - Nonlinear Science and Numerical Simulation. Ribeirao Preto, Brazil, South America, Nonlinear Science and Numerical Simulation, Drugs and Therapies, Health and Medicine, Mathematics, Therapy Keywords for this news article include: Ribeirao Preto, Brazil, South America, Nonlinear Science and Numerical Simulation, Drugs and Therapies, Health and Medicine, Mathematics, Therapy, University of Sao Paulo. [Extracted from the article]
- Published
- 2023
8. Selected papers.
- Author
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Ambrosio, Luigi, Maso, Gianni, Forti, Marco, Miranda, Mario, and Spagnolo, Sergio
- Abstract
All papers have been typed and translated trying to reproduce as much as possible their original aspect. We only used common fonts and the same style for the titles, the abstracts and the bibliography. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2006
- Full Text
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9. Towards primary school mathematics multipronged topbottom intervention framework.
- Author
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Baloyi, Dingaan Graham and Khumalo, Shuti Steph
- Abstract
Performance outcomes in mathematics in South African primary schools have reached alarming proportions. This paper seeks to delve deep into the challenges contributing to mathematics underperformance and gain insights from the perspectives of the departmental heads regarding the strategies they deploy in improving performance in their schools. In examining this phenomenon, we conducted semi-structured interviews that targeted departmental heads in primary schools in the Province of Limpopo, South Africa. In addition, quality management theory was used as a lens to frame the study theoretically. The study results demonstrate that departmental heads employ differentiated strategies to mitigate the pertinent challenges facing mathematics performance in primary schools. Amongst the key strategies departmental heads deploy include the following: Collaborative workshops and subject meetings, departmental heads initiated continuous professional development opportunities, provision of resources for teaching mathematics, control and monitoring as accounting measures, and confronting teacher insubordination. This paper is of significant value as it adds to new knowledge in managing and teaching mathematics in primary schools. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
10. The growth of the production of scientific papers in China and Japan-China relationship in co-authored papers.
- Author
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Ueno Sen, Yasuhiro, Yamashita, Tomizawa Hiroyuki, and Kondo Masayuki
- Subjects
INTERNATIONAL cooperation with research ,INTERNATIONAL cooperation ,INTERNATIONAL cooperation on science ,INTERNATIONAL cooperation on technology ,SCIENCE ,TECHNOLOGY ,PHYSICS ,ENGINEERING ,MATHEMATICS - Abstract
The science and technology activities in China are rapidly growing since 90s. This paper analyzes the production of scientific papers and the factor of increasing papers, and Japan-China relationship in co-authored papers. The growth rate of papers production became the sixth place in the world, the world share of papers increased by more than three times, and the papers production has concentrated on priority universities since the implementation of the top priority policy (211 project). And in internationally co-authored papers, Japan-China relationship rapidly deepens in the high share fields such as chemistries, materials, physics and engineering, while in mathematics in which China exceeds Japan, Japan-China relationship is not strong. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2006
- Full Text
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11. Implementing a pedagogical cycle to support data modelling and statistical reasoning in years 1 and 2 through the Interdisciplinary Mathematics and Science (IMS) project.
- Author
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Mulligan, Joanne, Tytler, Russell, Prain, Vaughan, and Kirk, Melinda
- Subjects
DATA modeling ,STATISTICAL models ,STATISTICS ,TEACHER role ,MODEL-based reasoning ,SIX Sigma ,MATHEMATICS - Abstract
This paper illustrates how years 1 and 2 students were guided to engage in data modelling and statistical reasoning through interdisciplinary mathematics and science investigations drawn from an Australian 3-year longitudinal study: Interdisciplinary Mathematics and Science Learning (https://imslearning.org/). The project developed learning sequences for 12 inquiry-based investigations involving 35 teachers and cohorts of between 25 and 70 students across years 1 through 6. The research used a design-based methodology to develop, implement, and refine a 4-stage pedagogical cycle based on students' problem posing, data generation, organisation, interpretation, and reasoning about data. Across the stages of the IMS cycle, students generated increasingly sophisticated representations of data and made decisions about whether these supported their explanations, claims about, and solutions to scientific problems. The teacher's role in supporting students' statistical reasoning was analysed across two learning sequences: Ecology in year 1 and Paper Helicopters in year 2 involving the same cohort of students. An explicit focus on data modelling and meta-representational practices enabled the year 1 students to form statistical ideas, such as distribution, sampling, and aggregation, and to construct a range of data representations. In year 2, students engaged in tasks that focused on ordering and aggregating data, measures of central tendency, inferential reasoning, and, in some cases, informal ideas of variability. The study explores how a representation-focused interdisciplinary pedagogy can support the development of data modelling and statistical thinking from an early age. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
12. Visualizing Math: How Number Lines Can Empower Problem-Solving.
- Author
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Berman, Tiffany and Hord, Casey
- Subjects
NUMBER line ,MATHEMATICAL models ,PROBLEM solving ,MATHEMATICS education (Elementary) ,EDUCATION of students with disabilities - Abstract
Research has shown the importance of helping students, especially those with mild-to-moderate learning disabilities, to offload information during problem-solving. When students can get their thoughts onto paper, number line strategies can help them develop a firm foundation in mathematical problem-solving while understanding the relationships between mathematical operations. These strategies are helpful for the development of addition, subtraction, multiplication, division, and later, fractional mathematics. In this article, we describe the progression of number lines as a supportive strategy for elementary students and those with developmental delays in mathematics to improve mathematical understanding. This strategy is based on students being able to show their work and think about what they have written on paper or how they have used manipulatives. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
13. TOWARDS AN ECOLOGICAL MATHEMATICS.
- Author
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Kumar, Siddharth Unnithan
- Subjects
ENVIRONMENTAL psychology ,ENVIRONMENTAL research ,SOCIOCULTURAL factors ,PHYSICAL sciences ,MATHEMATICAL models ,MATHEMATICS - Abstract
Mathematics plays a fundamental role in ecological research, yet its uses remain strikingly separate from advances in the environmental social sciences and humanities. In this paper, I work to address this impasse and outline the motivation and scope for an 'ecological mathematics', an approach to doing mathematics in environmental research which foregrounds relationship, embodiment and human difference. I begin by tracing the historical emergence of mathematics in ecology, noting how life processes have been conceptualised in a way which forces them to fit the ideals of mathematical models transplanted from the physical sciences. I then investigate the cultural factors shaping the evolution of mathematical thought, eliciting a malleability in how mathematical knowledge relates to the more-than-human world. This provides a place from which to rethink the role of abstraction in ecological thought, and develop mathematical methods grounded in ecological concepts. Drawing on ethnographic and perceptual accounts of space and time, I work with topological concepts from both mathematics and the social sciences to suggest a new correspondence between these subjects, elaborating a way of employing mathematical techniques which enliven, rather than deaden, the ecologies under study. The paper concludes with important philosophical clarifications to the approach of an ecological mathematics. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
14. Mathematics as Brain Training.
- Author
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Ďuriš, Viliam, Šumný, Timotej, Bojdová, Veronika, and Lengyelfalusy, Tomáš
- Subjects
MATHEMATICS education ,SEVENTH grade (Education) ,COGNITIVE training ,MULTIDIMENSIONAL scaling ,NUMERICAL calculations - Abstract
The work focuses on the comparison of basic strategies in the teaching of mathematics. The first option is to use a calculator and ICT in order to solve more complex tasks and not waste time on algorithmically simple tasks. The second option is to solve all tasks with a paper-and-pencil strategy, while the number of tasks will be lower due to the fact that we need time for numerical calculation. Pupils of the 7th grade of elementary school were compared with pupils up to two grades higher in order to find out the differences between their performances. Pupils of the 7th grade do not use calculators during the math classes and thus have to cope with each task without help. Pupils of higher grades have been using calculators for numerically more challenging tasks for the last two years. Results of the nonmetric multidimensional scaling showed that the 7th grade pupils have the different position on the one-dimensional scale than the pupils of higher grades.43T [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
15. Math Matters: From the Basics to Problem Solving in a South African Township.
- Author
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Robbins, Joanne K., Herzog, Leah, King, Kelsia, Snyder, Amy W., Sume, Nombulelo, and Gangiah, Jarren
- Subjects
CAREER development ,EDUCATIONAL technology ,TEACHERS ,TECHNOLOGY transfer ,EDUCATION research - Abstract
Nearly 30 years after the end of apartheid in South Africa, the education system has yet to provide learners with an adequate school experience. With school closures during the pandemic, the urgency to provide a quality education in the townships became even more dire. In collaboration with the leadership of Charles Duna Primary School in Gqeberha, South Africa, Partnerships for Educational Excellence and Research (PEER) International reestablished a partnership to design a flexible implementation of methods and curricula to build numeracy repertoires. Professional development efforts leverage evidence-based best teaching and learning strategies included in the Morningside Model of Generative Instruction (Johnson et al., 2020). Weekly videoconferences target the development of basic computation skill acquisition and math problem solving skills. The dramatically different environment and available resources in township schools is a prevailing consideration in this transfer of instructional technology. Our project started early in 2022 and continues with optimism and determination. The purpose of this paper is to describe our constructional approach (Goldiamond, 1974/2002 Behavior and Social Issues, 11(2), 108-197) when invited to improve classroom conditions for teachers and learners. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
16. Gender Inequality in STEM Education in Pakistan: A Case Study of Female Students.
- Author
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Qaisar, Mehreen
- Subjects
STEM education ,ACTIVISTS ,QUALITATIVE research ,GENDER inequality ,MATHEMATICS ,STUDENTS - Abstract
Emphasis on STEM education has gained the attention of activists to promote gender equality in the education field in the last few years. The objectives of the present research paper are: Why is there a need to address gender inequalities in STEM education in Pakistan? The second objective of the research is to highlight the obstacles that restrict women's access to STEM education in Pakistan. This research is qualitative in nature and based on the interviews of students enrolled in the faculty of humanities at the BS level in AIOU. Research gives directions to policymakers on how to increase women's enrollment in science, technology, engineering, and mathematics (STEM). [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
17. The relationship between prospective teachers' mathematics knowledge for teaching and their ability to notice student thinking.
- Author
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Spitzer, Sandy M. and Phelps-Gregory, Christine M.
- Subjects
MATHEMATICS teachers ,LEARNING ability ,PEER review of students ,MATHEMATICS ,RESEARCH personnel ,LEARNING goals - Abstract
In this paper, we investigate the links between prospective elementary teachers' (PTs') ability to notice student mathematical thinking, their mathematical knowledge for teaching (MKT) and their ability to decompose learning goals into component conceptual parts (Morris et al., 2009). Previously, researchers have proposed theoretical connections between MKT and teachers' professional noticing, but empirical support for these relationships has been limited. Results of this mixed-methods study indicate that PTs who scored higher on an MKT assessment outperformed their peers in terms of attending to student thinking but had similar performance in terms of interpreting that thinking. However, PTs who were able to conceptually unpack a learning goal into subconstructs performed higher-quality interpretations of student thinking. We hypothesize that the skill of decomposing learning goals may allow PTs to apply their mathematics knowledge to successfully interpret student work. These results have implications for understanding how noticing and MKT may develop in relation with each other. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
18. Interpreting young children's multiplicative strategies through their drawn representations.
- Author
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Cartwright, Katherin
- Subjects
CHILDREN'S drawings ,MATHEMATICAL sequences ,TEACHERS ,MATHEMATICS education ,MATHEMATICS - Abstract
The exploration of children's drawings as mathematical representations is a current focus in early years mathematics education research. This paper presents a qualitative analysis of 72 kindergarten to Grade 3 (5 to 8 years old) children's drawings produced during problem-solving tasks centred on multiplicative strategies. Existing frameworks for the developmental sequence of mathematical drawings and the progression of children's strategies for multiplicative situations were an interpretive lens through which to analyse the drawings. Children used pictographic and iconic drawing types to represent the "story" in the problem and the multiplicative strategies employed to solve the tasks. Exploration of the children's drawings suggested that as children's drawings become more structural, schematic in nature, it may be easier for children to show their understanding of the structural elements of multiplicative relationships. Results revealed that structural elements of multiplicative relationships were more easily seen in iconic representations; however, both pictographic and iconic drawings were useful to observe counting, additive, and multiplicative strategies when mathematical elements of the problem were visible. Additional representations attached to the drawings (e.g. numerical) were needed to confirm children's strategies when their drawings lacked structure. These findings have implications for how young children's drawings are interpreted by classroom teachers. The interpretation of these drawings suggested that some children may not yet realise how their drawings in mathematics need to shift from illustrations of the problem's story context to representing mathematical ideas and processes — which requires intentional teaching of the purpose of drawings for mathematical contexts. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
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19. Analysis of academic trajectories of higher education students by means of an absorbing Markov chain.
- Author
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Batún, José Luis, Cool, Rubén, and Pantí, Henry
- Subjects
MARKOV processes ,MAXIMUM likelihood statistics ,EDUCATION students ,STOCHASTIC processes ,HIGHER education ,ACADEMIC improvement ,MATHEMATICS ,ACADEMIC programs - Abstract
Copyright of Revista de la Academia Colombiana de Ciencias Exactas, Físicas y Naturales is the property of Academia Colombiana de Ciencias Exactas, Fisicas y Naturales and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
20. Fine-Tuned T5 For Auto-Grading Of Quadratic Equation Problems.
- Author
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Balakrishnan, Roshni M, Pati, Peeta Basa, Singh, Rimjhim Padam, S, Santhanalakshmi, and Kumar, Priyanka
- Subjects
DEEP learning ,MACHINE learning ,QUADRATIC equations ,FORMAL languages - Abstract
Assessments constitute a fundamental and inevitable component of any educational journey. Manual effort required for the evaluation of these assessments is very high. Automation of the evaluation process and grading helps in making the review process more efficient, objective, and scalable, thereby reducing the workload of human reviewers. Automating the grading process for multiple-choice and short-answer assessments is relatively straightforward, but it poses significant challenges when applied to the evaluation of formal languages, particularly in the context of mathematical assessments. In this paper a model that automatically evaluates and grades the Quadratic Equation problems is presented. The study is conducted using a manually curated dataset comprising 1200 solutions to various quadratic equation problems. Embeddings of the quadratic solutions are generated using Google's T5 Model. These embeddings are then used to train different traditional and ensembled machine learning models along with complex Deep learning models like LSTM and Bi LSTM. An in-depth analysis of the fine-tuned T5 model's performance, evaluating its effectiveness in comparison with the pretrained T5 model in automatic grading of quadratic equation problems has been explored. Fine-tuning significantly contributes to the reduction of error by 70% and a noticeable increase in the R2 value to 97%. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
21. A Blueprint for Rural Mathematics: Connecting Social Space, Identity and Teacher Pedagogy.
- Author
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Morphett, Annette, O'Keeffe, Lisa, and Paige, Kathryn
- Subjects
SOCIAL space ,MATHEMATICS education ,MATHEMATICS teachers ,RURAL education ,METROPOLIS ,RURAL sociology - Abstract
This paper reports on the development and use of a Blueprint for Rural Mathematics (herein referred to as the Blueprint) in a study of middle-primary mathematics teaching. The study presented a counter-narrative to the deficit discourse around rural education outcomes through an emic perspective of middle-primary mathematics on the Yorke Peninsula, a rural district in southern Australia. This study defined 'rural' as a sociological and geographical phenomenon. It takes a sociological stance acknowledging the situatedness of the rural and the social and cultural uniqueness of the people and their communities. Geographically, the rural locations in this study were those distanced from, and outside the commuting zone of, large urban areas and major cities. This study claimed that rural schools of Yorke Peninsula are unresearched, undertheorised and underestimated in their teaching of mathematics. Hence, very little was known about the experiences of the Yorke Peninsula teachers or the pedagogical practices they employed in their mathematics teaching. Yorke Peninsula people have an identity of deficit imposed on them with no opportunity to negotiate it. In understanding and addressing the accuracy of this pervasive negative framing, this study investigated Yorke Peninsula teachers of mathematics. It concluded that the rural social space, the identity of its members, and teacher pedagogy are essential considerations in mathematics teaching. The Blueprint provides a framework to explore these key components of rural education. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
22. The mediating role of higher-order thinking skill in the relationship between mathematics strength and achievement in electrical and electronic engineering education.
- Author
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Theodore Oduro-Okyireh, Budi Mulyanti, Dedi Rohendi, George Oduro-Okyireh, Alice Constance Mensah, and Kennedy Acheam pong
- Subjects
CRITICAL thinking ,MATHEMATICS ,ENGINEERING education - Abstract
Purpose: The paper aims to examine the casual role of higher-order thinking skills as a mediator in the relationship between students' strength in mathematics and achievement in electrical and electronic engineering education. Design/Methodology/Approach: The study adopted a quantitative research design where random cluster sampling was used to select a total of 488 final-year students from four technical universities in Ghana. Mathematics achievement tests were used to gather data on students' higher-order thinking skills and competence in five areas of mathematics. Also, their examination results were collected from their respective universities. Mediation analysis was done using AMOS 26. Finding: The study revealed that the positive effect of students' strengths in the five selected mathematics topics on their performance in electrical and electronic engineering education is mediated by their higher-order thinking skills. Conclusion: The research concludes that there is a partial mediation in the relationship between students' strength in mathematics and achievement in electrical and electronic engineering education by higher-order thinking skills. Research Limitations: It is recommended that further researchers carry out similar research with more mathematics indicators to explain more variations in achievement in electrical and electronic engineering education. Practical Implication: Engineering mathematics curriculum developers should stress the need for mathematics, especially algebra, for the development of higher-order thinking skills to facilitate problem-solving in electrical and electronic engineering education and practice. Contribution to Literature: This study highlights the relationship between the understanding of the concepts of specific mathematics topics, higher-order thinking skills, and achievement in electrical and electronic engineering education. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
23. A new mathematical formulation and a hybrid evolutionary algorithm for re-entrant flow-shop problem with release date.
- Author
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Behmanesh, R. and Kianfar, K.
- Subjects
MATHEMATICS ,MIXED integer linear programming ,GENETIC algorithms ,TARDINESS ,BIOGEOGRAPHY - Abstract
In this paper, we address the weighted multi-objective re-entrant owshop scheduling problem considering release dates in order to minimize makespan, total completion time, total tardiness, maximum idle time, and number of tardy jobs. Each job is taken into account with deterministic processing times, and release dates. The flow-shop comprised of two workshops in whose jobs are entered to the main workshop and after the first part of the processing, they are transferred to the second workshop and after this stage, the jobs are returned to the main workshop for the last part of the processing. We model the problem by a new mixed integer programming based on formulating sum of idle time as a new concept. Moreover, a hybrid evolutionary algorithm is proposed based on some dispatching rules, ant colony optimization, and genetic algorithm. The performance of the proposed algorithm on some test instances is compared to the mixed integer linear programming model as well as the state-of-the-art algorithms called genetic algorithm, tabu search, bio-geography based optimization, and artificial bee colony. The computational experiments show that our proposed approach outperforms other algorithms and the results indicate efficiency and capability of the proposed algorithm in comparison with the traditional algorithms. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
24. COMPARISON OF PRIMARY EDUCATION VIII (IX) CLASS MATHEMATICS CURRICULUM OF MONTENEGRO, SERBIA, BOSNIA AND HERZEGOVINA, CROATIA, AND TURKEY.
- Author
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Hasić, Amor and Aydin, Emin
- Subjects
SET theory ,PRIMARY school curriculum ,PRIMARY education ,MATHEMATICS ,CURRICULUM ,CURRICULUM planning - Abstract
The aim of this research is to compare the main aims and objectives, learning outcomes or contents/concepts of the mathematics curriculum for VIII (IX) primary schools used in Montenegro, Serbia, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Croatia and Turkey. Mathematics curricula for Montenegro, Serbia, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Croatia and Turkey are comparatively analyzed in the following research article: a) Montenegrin mathematics curriculum and program used for primary school grade 9, b) Serbian mathematics curriculum and program c) used for primary school grade IX Bosnia and Herzegovina mathematics curriculum, d) Croatian mathematics curriculum used for primary school VIII class, and e) Republic of Turkey Mathematics Curriculum VIII. It is the syllabus used in the classroom. Each country does its best to design a quality curriculum by comparing its curriculum with other countries, which means the goal is to get the best education system possible. As I am from Montenegro, my main goal is to find the best possible education system for my country by comparing it with the countries of former Yugoslavia and Turkey. The result is clear and stated in the paper, in short, I can say that the results are that we have a random curriculum and the aim is to develop it and integrate it into modern teaching and put into practice practices that will generate interest and desire to learn. As a result, studies should be carried out on the use of education, the quality of the education system, teaching staff and teaching materials in a way that includes all aspects of life in the teaching process. From the above, I can say that it is a continuation of the V (VI), VI (VII) curriculum, which has already been compared with the addition of the Turkish curriculum, where the concept of introduction and paper is similar with minor changes., excluding the part by comparison. This part of the work concerns only the specified class, i.e. VIII (IX) primary school. The collected data were analyzed relatively using document analysis as a qualitative analysisamethod. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
25. WHAT DO YOU SEE IN MATHEMATICAL PLAY?
- Author
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Gresalfi, Melissa, Parks, Amy Noelle, Wager, Anita A., Bryan, Nathaniel, Jessup, Naomi, and Templeton, Tran
- Subjects
EDUCATIONAL psychology ,MATHEMATICS education ,MATHEMATICS students ,KINDERGARTEN ,EARLY childhood education - Abstract
As part of a longitudinal study focused on mathematical play, we (Melissa, Amy, and Anita) are often faced with questions about what counts as play and what mathematics (and other learning) we see in play, and whose play is most likely to be seen or dismissed. Rather than discuss our findings from classroom videos of kindergarten children engaged in mathematical play, we asked scholars who bring different lenses to research on play, young children, and teaching and learning mathematics to look at some of our data and provide their perspectives. In this session, we will share video and discuss with our panel (Nathaniel, Naomi, and Tran) various ways to interpret that video. This paper provides background on the potential of mathematical play and the details of the study that generated data for analysis. We conclude with a copy of a transcript that is associated with a video we will watch during the plenary with hopes that participants will watch prior to the session and come with their own questions/perspectives. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
26. A Mathematical Origami Puzzle.
- Author
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Dukes, Patrick S. and Rusinko, Joseph P.
- Subjects
ORIGAMI ,MATHEMATICS ,PAPER arts ,RECREATIONAL mathematics ,GEOMETRY - Abstract
The recent axiomization of Origami has led to numerous breakthroughs in both mathematics and in understanding of the ancient art of paper folding. We propose a puzzle whose solution demonstrates the power of mathematical origami. This puzzle is accessible to the geometry student and could be used as supplemental geometry instruction as an extension of traditional compass and straight edge constructions. Detailed images and photos are provided to guide the audience through the puzzle's solution. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2011
27. Mathematical methodology and MATLAB computer program to calculate the effective-dose of percent response using the probit analysis technique.
- Author
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Tlas, M. and Ghani, B. A.
- Subjects
MATHEMATICS ,COMPUTER programming ,PROBIT analysis ,BIOLOGICAL assay ,REGRESSION analysis - Abstract
Using the probit analysis technique, mathematical algorithm and MATLAB computer program have been implemented in this paper to calculate both the Log-Dose (LD) and the Effective-Dose (ED) for any given percent. The probit analysis uses a successive weighted simple linear regression of experimental or row data. The kind of row data obtained from the bioassays should be generally in percent response (mortality or affected) at the corresponding doses (or concentrations). The response should be always in binomial form (e.g. death/no death) and the relationship between the response and the various doses or concentrations is always sigmoid or non-linear. The probit analysis here acts as a transformation from sigmoid or non-linear relationship to linear one and then uses a successive weighted simple linear regression on the linear relationship of the observed data. It is necessarily to note that, the probit analysis always assumes that the relationship between number responding (not proportion response) and dose (or concentration) should be normally distributed. Two simple examples are explained in this paper to prove the validity and the consistency of both the proposed mathematical methodology and the concerning computer program. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
28. Blind Steganalysis: Estimation of Hidden Message Length.
- Author
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Jena, Sanjay Kumar and Krishna, G. V. V.
- Subjects
IMAGE ,ALGORITHMS ,CRYPTOGRAPHY ,PAPER arts ,EXPERIMENTS ,INTERNET ,THEORY ,MATHEMATICS - Abstract
Steganography is used to hide the occurrence of communication. Discovering and rendering useless such covert message is an art of steganalysis. The importance of techniques that can reliably detect the presence of secret messages in images is increasing as images can hide a large amount of malicious code that could be activated by a small Trojan horse type of virus and also for tracking criminal activities over Internet. This paper presents an improved blind steganalysis technique. The proposed algorithm reduces the initial-bias, and estimates the LSB embedding message ratios by constructing equations with the statistics of difference image histogram. Experimental results show that this algorithm is more accurate and reliable than the conventional difference image histogram method. It outperforms other powerful steganalysis approaches for embedded ratio greater than 40% and comparable with RS steganalysis technique for shorter hidden message length. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2007
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
29. THE POST-COVID 19 ERA, CHAT BOTS, AND THE HOMOGENIZATION OF EDUCATION: PLURALISM AS AN EPISTEMIC VIRTUE EXEMPLIFIED BY MATHEMATICS EDUCATION.
- Author
-
Antonio Pérez-Escobar, José and Sarikaya, Deniz
- Subjects
CHATBOTS ,LANGUAGE models ,VIRTUE epistemology ,COVID-19 pandemic ,MATHEMATICS education ,ASYMPTOTIC homogenization ,MATHEMATICS - Abstract
This paper aims to raise awareness about a potential harmful consequence of teaching adaptations due to the Covid-19 pandemic and advanced AI-powered chat bots in the context of large language models. As video lectures might undermine pluralism in mathematics, we argue that such developments could be harmful for mathematical practice and society at large. We argue that the mathematical undergraduate curriculum should not be too hard codified and formalized via an abuse of online teaching tools. In order to show why a plurality of research practices constitutes a great resource for mathematical progress, we will discuss a historical situation regarding the developments of the Tripos in Cambridge. We will also discuss analogies with economics and ideas on mathematical pluralism and productive ambiguity. Finally, we suggest that pluralism in education may be desirable in other fields too. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
30. Application of Discrete and Fast Fourier Transforms to Increase the Speed of Multiscale Image Analysis.
- Author
-
Ďuriš, Viliam, Semenov, Vladimir I., and Chumarov, Sergey G.
- Subjects
DISCRETE Fourier transforms ,FAST Fourier transforms ,DISCRETE wavelet transforms ,IMAGE analysis ,WAVELET transforms ,MATHEMATICS - Abstract
The paper compares the accuracy of reconstruction using different wavelets, and the authors also use fast and discrete Fourier transforms together to calculate the forward and inverse continuous wavelet transform in the frequency domain. Due to the use of calculations in the frequency domain, it becomes possible to perform decomposition, reconstruction, image filtering, and other transformations with high performance and precision. For multiscale signal analysis, a wavelet with a rectangular amplitude-frequency response has been constructed, which allows for an increase in the accuracy of decomposition and reconstruction compared to the Mallat algorithm presented in Matlab computer mathematics. At the same time, the time of multiscale analysis is reduced several times compared to the Mallat algorithm. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
31. MATHEMATICS, NARRATIVES AND LIFE: RECONCILING SCIENCE AND THE HUMANITIES.
- Author
-
Gare, Arran
- Abstract
The triumph of scientific materialism in the Seventeenth Century not only bifurcated nature into matter and mind and primary and secondary qualities, as Alfred North Whitehead pointed out in Science and the Modern World. It divided science and the humanities. The core of science is the effort to comprehend the cosmos through mathematics. The core of the humanities is the effort to comprehend history and human nature through narratives. The life sciences can be seen as the zone in which the conflict between these two very different ways of comprehending the world collide. Evolutionary theory as defended by Schelling developed out of natural history, but efforts have been made to formulate neo-Darwinism through mathematical models. However, it is impossible to eliminate stories from biology. As Stuart Kauffman argued, mathematical models attempt to pre-state all possibilities, but in evolution there can be adjacent possibles that can be embraced by organisms but cannot be pre-stated. To account for such actions it is necessary to tell stories. Mathematics provides analytic precision allowing long chains of deductions, but tends to deny temporal becoming and cannot do justice to the openness of the future, while narratives focus on processes and events, but lack exactitude that would provide precise deductions and predictions. In advancing mathematics adequate to life, Robert Rosen argued that living beings as anticipatory systems must have models of themselves, and strove to develop a form of mathematics able to model life itself. It has been convincingly argued that narratives are central to human self-creation and they are lived out before being explicitly told. Their models of themselves are first and foremost, stories or narratives. If this is the case, might not living beings as biological entities be characterized by proto-stories or narratives in their models of themselves? Biosemiotics, largely inspired by C.S. Peirce, provides a bridge between mathematical and narrative comprehension, conceiving them as different forms of semiosis. The study of life through biosemiotics could reveal how mathematics and narratives can be understood in relation to each other. This could then have implications for how we understand science and the humanities and their relationship to each other. In this paper I will examine work in theoretical biology that might advance these efforts. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
32. Consideraciones sobre la relación entre el Arte figurativo y la Matemática.
- Author
-
D'Amore, Bruno and Fandiño Pinilla, Martha Isabel
- Subjects
FIGURATIVE art ,SEMIOTICS ,GEOMETRY ,MATHEMATICS ,HYPOTHESIS - Abstract
Copyright of Paradigma is the property of Universidad Pedagogica Experimental Libertador and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
33. Early childhood music and maths: The language of patterns.
- Author
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Acker, Aleksandra, Nyland, Berenice, and Đokić, Olivera
- Subjects
LINGUISTICS ,MUSIC videos ,EARLY childhood teachers ,MATHEMATICS ,EXPRESSIVE language ,TEACHER training ,HEARING impaired children - Abstract
This paper examines the relationship between early childhood music and maths. The emphasis is on children as intuitive pattern makers as they explore, categorise and imagine their worlds. We argue for the careful listening of childhood languages and reason that music and maths are expressive languages that young children use to investigate and experiment. This concept is based on Malaguzzi’s idea of the hundred languages of children. Children’s explorations of patterns, whether music, maths or other media will follow the principle of symmetry. We observe the intersectionality of language/s. Data are drawn from video and teaching materials prepared for early childhood teachers in-service training in Australia. Framing the discussion with Vygotskian and developmental theories we identify the patterns a child makes in a music discovery video and categorise the child’s actions to combine both musical and mathematical concepts within the one action. The aim of the research is to revisit early childhood curriculum and pedagogy, rethinking sources of knowledge and the value of treating arts and sciences as being of equal importance as children discover and define their worlds. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
34. Who's the Best Detective? Large Language Models vs. Traditional Machine Learning in Detecting Incoherent Fourth Grade Math Answers.
- Author
-
Urrutia, Felipe and Araya, Roberto
- Subjects
LANGUAGE models ,MACHINE learning ,CHATGPT ,MATHEMATICS ,DETECTIVES - Abstract
Written answers to open-ended questions can have a higher long-term effect on learning than multiple-choice questions. However, it is critical that teachers immediately review the answers, and ask to redo those that are incoherent. This can be a difficult task and can be time-consuming for teachers. A possible solution is to automate the detection of incoherent answers. One option is to automate the review with Large Language Models (LLM). They have a powerful discursive ability that can be used to explain decisions. In this paper, we analyze the responses of fourth graders in mathematics using three LLMs: GPT-3, BLOOM, and YOU. We used them with zero, one, two, three and four shots. We compared their performance with the results of various classifiers trained with Machine Learning (ML). We found that LLMs perform worse than MLs in detecting incoherent answers. The difficulty seems to reside in recursive questions that contain both questions and answers, and in responses from students with typical fourth-grader misspellings. Upon closer examination, we have found that the ChatGPT model faces the same challenges. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
35. Successful teaching practices for english language learners in multilingual mathematics classrooms: a meta-analysis.
- Author
-
Sharma, Shweta and Sharma, Sashi
- Subjects
LIMITED English-proficient students ,TEACHER development ,FOREIGN language education ,MATHEMATICS ,RESEARCH questions - Abstract
Due to rapid immigration, many children worldwide are learning mathematics in a second or additional language. This language diversity can be challenging for both teachers and students and carries profound implications for mathematics educators. Research shows that teachers use various ways to support English Language Learners. Research on multilingualism in mathematics classrooms has often focused on qualitative research. This meta-analysis aims to explore the statistically effective successful teaching practices from the studies using quantitative or mixed-method research approaches and aims to inform the research field in a cumulative manner. The specific research question that guided this meta-analysis is: What is the evidence regarding successful teaching of mathematics for Year 1–10 English Language Learners from 2009–2019 in countries where curricula are delivered predominantly in English? Four successful intervention categories were identified: Dual Language Programmes, Curriculum integration, Teacher Professional Development, and Cognitively Focused Interventions. The paper concludes with recommendations for practice and further research in this area. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
36. An editorial comment on the preceding paper.
- Author
-
Dold, A., Takens, F., Teissier, B., Milman, Vitali D., Schechtman, Gideon, and Schechtman, G.
- Published
- 2000
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
37. SCHOLASTIC MATH TEACHER'S EDITION, VOLUME 26 NUMBER 11, APRIL 17, 2006.
- Subjects
PUBLICATIONS ,MATHEMATICS ,PAPER recycling ,ENDANGERED species ,HURRICANES ,CONTESTS - Abstract
The article presents a teacher's guide to math-related topics covered by the April 7, 2006 issue of Scholastic Math (Teacher's Edition). The publication includes topics such as numbers and math behind recycling paper, endangered animals and hurricane devastation. Information on how to join the Scholastic Math Contest is provided. There are two parts to the contest and these are answering the questions in the student edition of the publication and designing a Save the Species amusement park ride.
- Published
- 2006
38. Combined Teaching of Mathematics with the Halomda Platform.
- Author
-
Kugel, Leonid, Slobodsky, Philip, and Durcheva, Mariana
- Subjects
STUDENT engagement ,ACTIVE learning ,DISTANCE education ,MATHEMATICS ,DIFFERENTIAL equations ,WORD problems (Mathematics) - Abstract
Distance learning is very challenging for both teachers and students. Technology can help educators in combined teaching, which means combining traditional educational methods with active learning. The Halomda educational platform provides improving students' active learning due to better students' engagement. This enhances students' performance as well as the ability to solve mathematics problems. In this paper, we share our experience of how using the Halomda system for combined teaching in the "differential equations" course significantly improves student learning outcomes. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
39. Learning Mathematics with Large Language Models: A Comparative Study with Computer Algebra Systems and Other Tools.
- Author
-
Matzakos, Nikolaos, Doukakis, Spyridon, and Moundridou, Maria
- Subjects
LANGUAGE models ,COMPUTER systems ,ARTIFICIAL intelligence ,CHATGPT ,GEMINI (Chatbot) ,MATHEMATICS ,RECREATIONAL mathematics - Abstract
Artificial intelligence (AI) has permeated all human activities, bringing about significant changes and creating new scientific and ethical challenges. The field of education could not be an exception to this development. OpenAI's unveiling of ChatGPT, their large language model (LLM), has sparked significant interest in the potential applications of this technology in education. This paper aims to contribute to the ongoing discussion on the role of AI in education and its potential implications for the future of learning by exploring how LLMs could be utilized in the teaching of mathematics in higher education and how they compare to the currently widely used computer algebra systems (CAS) and other mathematical tools. It argues that these innovative tools have the potential to provide functional and pedagogical opportunities that may influence changes in curriculum and assessment approaches. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
40. Designing the supports for successful groupwork: How to make your task group-WORTHY.
- Author
-
Swartz, Barbara Ann and DeRosa, Katherine
- Subjects
MATHEMATICS teachers ,SOCIAL skills ,COMMUNICATIVE competence ,STUDENT engagement ,MATHEMATICS - Abstract
Groupwork provides opportunities to learn important communication and collaboration skills, but how can we ensure all students are participating equitably while also engaging with the academic content when working in groups? Group-worthy tasks provide participation structures needed for students to engage with the content as well as develop and practice such social skills. This paper describes how to revise or design a task to be group-worthy in the mathematics classroom, using an example task we modified from the National Council of Teacher of Mathematics. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
41. Draw yourself doing mathematics: developing an analytical tool to investigate the nature of young children's attitudes towards mathematics.
- Author
-
Quane, Kate, Chinnappan, Mohan, and Trenholm, Sven
- Subjects
CHILDHOOD attitudes ,CHILDREN'S drawings ,STUDENT attitudes ,MATHEMATICS - Abstract
Understanding children's attitudes towards mathematics provides insights into their lived mathematical experience and engagement. Despite the considerable amount of research into students' attitudes toward mathematics, limited research has been conducted into young children's attitudes toward mathematics (YCATM). Within this limited research, investigating YCATM has certain challenges. From a methodological perspective, limitations exist regarding the type of research techniques that can be employed to study the nuances of the issue. The foci of this paper are to present and evaluate a methodological approach that used children's drawings (N = 106) and interview responses as the primary sources of data. Findings indicate that the strategy of "Draw yourself doing mathematics", when used with other research methods, generated rich attitudinal data in the form of personal stories about YCATM. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
42. HOW TRANSITIONS BETWEEN RELATED ARTIFACTS SUPPORT STUDENTS' COVARIATIONAL REASONING.
- Author
-
Germia, Erell, York, Toni, and Panorkou, Nicole
- Subjects
ELEMENTARY schools ,MATHEMATICS ,DYNAMIC models ,DISTANCE education ,TEACHERS - Abstract
Many studies use instructional designs that include two or more artifacts (digital manipulatives, tables, graphs) to support students' development of reasoning about covarying quantities. While students' forms of covariational reasoning and the designs are often the focus of these studies, the way students' interactions and transitions between artifacts shape their actions and thinking is often neglected. By examining the transitions that students make between artifacts as they construct and reorganize their reasoning, our study aimed to justify claims made by various studies about the nature of the synergy of artifacts. In this paper, we present data from a design experiment with a pair of sixth-grade students to discuss how their transitions between artifacts provided a constructive space for them to reason about covarying quantities in graphs. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
43. Building a mathematics model for lane‐change technology of autonomous vehicles.
- Author
-
Phuong, Pham Anh, Phap, Huynh Cong, and Tho, Quach Hai
- Subjects
AUTONOMOUS vehicles ,LANE changing ,INTELLIGENT transportation systems ,MATHEMATICS - Abstract
In the process of autonomous vehicle motion planning and to create comfort for vehicle occupants, factors that must be considered are the vehicle's safety features and the road's slipperiness and smoothness. In this paper, we build a mathematical model based on the combination of a genetic algorithm and a neural network to offer lane‐change solutions of autonomous vehicles, focusing on human vehicle control skills. Traditional moving planning methods often use vehicle kinematic and dynamic constraints when creating lane‐change trajectories for autonomous vehicles. When comparing this generated trajectory with a man‐generated moving trajectory, however, there is in fact a significant difference. Therefore, to draw the optimal factors from the actual driver's lane‐change operations, the solution in this paper builds the training data set for the moving planning process with lane change operation by humans with optimal elements. The simulation results are performed in a MATLAB simulation environment to demonstrate that the proposed solution operates effectively with optimal points such as operator maneuvers and improved comfort for passengers as well as creating a smooth and slippery lane‐change trajectory. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
44. COMPARAR EL USO DE TECNOLOGÍAS DIGITALES Y EL MÉTODO TRADICIONAL PARA COMPRENDER EL CONCEPTO DE VARIABILIDAD ESTADÍSTICA.
- Author
-
de Oliveira Júnior, Ailton Paulo, Pereira, Flávia Helena, de Carvalho, Diego Marques, and de Oliveira Costa, Jaqueline
- Subjects
DISTRIBUTION (Probability theory) ,DATA distribution ,ELECTRONIC data processing ,TEACHING methods ,MATHEMATICS - Abstract
Copyright of Paradigma is the property of Universidad Pedagogica Experimental Libertador and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
45. The Role of Design Features in the Affordances of Digital Math Games.
- Author
-
MOYER-PACKENHAM, PATRICIA S., LOMMATSCH, CHRISTINA W., LITSTER, KRISTY, HARMON, M. JILL, and ROXBURGH, ALLISON
- Subjects
GAMES ,EDUCATIONAL games ,RESEARCH personnel ,MATHEMATICS - Abstract
This paper reports on a large clinical study with 193 children (Grades 3-6) who interacted with 12 digital math games during clinical interviews. Children completed a pretest interacted with the digital math games, completed a posttest, and answered questions about their interactions with the games. During the interviews, researchers used two video perspectives to capture children's interactions and onscreen gestures. Mixed methods were employed to analyze pretest and posttest data and to examine how the design features in each digital game afforded learning opportunities for children. The resuits showed that children exhibited different levels of awareness of the design features. some features helped or hindered different children, and children who were able to connect the digital games with the mathematics in the games exhibited higher learning gains. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
46. Game-Based Learning and Gamification Technologies in the Preparation of Future Mathematics Teachers.
- Author
-
Vankúš, Peter
- Subjects
GAMIFICATION ,MATHEMATICS teachers ,CONCEPT learning - Abstract
Our paper advocates the preparation of future mathematics teachers for the use of game-based learning and gamification technologies. For this purpose, we created a university course that is dedicated to familiarizing the students with basic concepts of game-based learning and gamification and to conveying direct experience with their use. We support the concept and activities in this course by the positive results of the research on the opinions of 115 students. We hope that the positive results and our description of the course will be an inspiration for the broader incorporation of game-based learning and gamification technologies into the training of future mathematics teachers. Limitations of our research are the research sample, we investigated students' reactions only at the author's home university. Therefore, in the future, the research could be done with a broader sample and studying more in detail the students' beliefs related to game-based learning and gamification before and after the course to get a better view of their development. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
47. SUPPOSE A SITUATION: WHAT FOUCAULT HELPS UNCOVER.
- Author
-
Weiland, Travis
- Subjects
ARCHAEOLOGY ,HIGH school students ,MATHEMATICS ,DISCOURSE analysis ,METHODOLOGY - Abstract
In this paper, I discuss an Archeological analysis of two high school mathematics textbook series in an effort to investigate how actions for the doing of statistics are formed by statements from the statistics lessons the texts. The objective of this paper is not to present all of the findings related to the posed question, but to focus on discussing the methodology employed (i.e. Foucauldian Discourse Analysis), which is relatively novel for analyzing textbooks in mathematics education. One finding will be presented to highlight how the methodology employed can contribute to the field helping to uncover patterns not found using well established deductive frameworks. This methodological discussion is meant to provide an example of how using different methodologies can help to investigate issues in the field and problematize taken for granted norms against a new horizon to embrace the sociopolitical turn. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
48. MATHEMATICAL PROBLEM-SOLVING BY MEANS OF COMPUTATIONAL THINKING AND PROGRAMMING: A USE-MODIFY-CREATE APPROACH.
- Author
-
Hansen, Nils Kristian and Hadjerrouit, Said
- Subjects
MATHEMATICS ,PROBLEM solving ,COMPUTATIONAL intelligence ,TELEVISION programmers & programming ,ALGORITHMS - Abstract
This paper aims at using a Use-Modify-Create approach to explore students' mathematical problem solving by means of computational thinking (CT) and programming activities. The data collection method is participant observation, in which the researcher also has the role as teacher, guiding the group activities. In our study, two groups of students at the undergraduate level solving a mathematical task. The main finding of the study shows that the progression through the Use-Modify-Create continuum did not work as expected and that the connections between mathematical thinking, computational thinking, and programming proved difficult for the students. Conclusions so far are drawn from the study to promote mathematical problem solving by means of computational thinking and programming in a Use-Modify-Create context. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
49. Divergence in Interviews with Children – Improving Research Quality.
- Author
-
PALMÉR, HANNA and BJÖRKLUND, CAMILLA
- Subjects
PRESCHOOL teachers ,PRESCHOOL children - Abstract
This paper reports on a design oriented study conducted in close collaboration between two researchers and three preschool teachers. Within this study, a play-based interview script was designed in accordance with theoretically driven principles. Based on this script, the preschool teachers conducted interviews with children from three preschools five times over four semesters. The focus of this paper is methodological, aiming to show how sensitive divergence in these play-based interviews lead to a strengthened research quality. Of importance is that this quality improving divergence would not have been realized without the close collaboration between researchers and preschool teachers. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
50. A formatação da prova afeta o desempenho dos estudantes? Evidências do Enem (2016).
- Author
-
Barichello, Leonardo, Santos Guimarães, Rita, and Figueiredo Filho, Dalson Britto
- Subjects
FATIGUE (Physiology) ,STANDARDIZED tests ,SECONDARY education ,MATHEMATICS - Abstract
Copyright of Educacao e Pesquisa is the property of Faculdade de Educacao da Universidade de Sao Paulo and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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