QUANTITATIVE OPERATIONS AS A BASIS FOR ALGEBRAIC REASONING AND TEACHING PRACTICES

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Date

2004

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North American chapter of the International Group for the Psychology of Mathematics Education (PME-NA)

Abstract

We present initial analysis of data from a long-term constructivist teaching experiment whose purpose is to understand how middle grade students can build algebraic reasoning out of their evolving quantitative operations and quantitative reasoning. We taught 4 pairs of 6th graders at a rural middle school in Georgia from October 2003 to May 2004 and will work with them through AY 2004-2005. Teaching episodes occurred biweekly, lasted thirty minutes, were videotaped, and included the use of computer software—TIMA: Sticks and Javabars. For this presentation we focus on 2 pairs of students, describing how they built a quantitative scheme that we believe underlies the construction and solution of basic linear equations (i.e., of the form ax= b.) In this process we discuss the connection between quantitative schemes and basic linear equations, a hallmark of algebra.

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Hackenberg, A. J., & Tillema, E. S. (2004). Quantitative operations as a basis for algebraic reasoning and teaching practices. In D. E. McDougall & J. A. Ross (Eds.), Proceedings of the Twenty-sixth Annual Meeting of PME-NA (pp. 302-303). Toronto, Canada: OISE/UT

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Article