Fr. 179.00

Challenges and Strategies in Teaching Linear Algebra

English · Hardback

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Description

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This book originated from a Discussion Group (Teaching Linear Algebra) that was held at the 13th International Conference on Mathematics Education (ICME-13). The aim was to consider and highlight current efforts regarding research and instruction on teaching and learning linear algebra from around the world, and to spark new collaborations. As the outcome of the two-day discussion at ICME-13, this book focuses on the pedagogy of linear algebra with a particular emphasis on tasks that are productive for learning. 
The main themes addressed include: theoretical perspectives on the teaching and learning of linear algebra; empirical analyses related to learning particular content in linear algebra; the use of technology and dynamic geometry software; and pedagogical discussions of challenging linear algebra tasks. 
Drawing on the expertise of mathematics education researchers and research mathematicians with experience in teaching linear algebra, this book gathers work from nine countries: Austria, Germany, Israel, Ireland, Mexico, Slovenia, Turkey, the USA and Zimbabwe.

List of contents

Contents.- .- Part I. Theoretical Perspectives Elaborated through Tasks.- The Learning and Teaching of Linear Algebra through the Lenses of Intellectual Need and Epistemological Justification and Their Constituents.- .- Learning Linear Algebra Using Models and Conceptual Activities .- .- Moving between the embodied, symbolic and formal worlds of mathematical thinking with specific linear algebra tasks.- .- Part II. Analyses of Learners' Approaches and Resources.- Systems of linear equations - a key element in the learning of Linear Algebra.- .- Rationale for Matrix Multiplication in Linear Algebra Textbooks.- .- An Action Process Object Schema (APOS) analysis of the understanding of determinants of matrices by Zimbabwean undergraduate mathematics students.- .- Difficulties associated with understanding the concept of vector subspace: A case study of Zimbabwean teachers.- .- Stretch Directions and Stretch Factors: A Sequence Intended to Support Guided Reinvention of Eigenvector and Eigenvalue Stretch Directions and Stretch Factors: A Sequence Intended to Support Guided Reinvention of Eigenvector and Eigenvalue.- .- .- Examining Students' Procedural and Conceptual Understanding of Eigenvectors and Eigenvalues in the Context of Inquiry-Oriented Instruction.- Part III. Dynamic Geometry Approaches.- Mental Schemes of Linear Algebra Visual Constructs.- How DGS mediates students' reasoning on 3D linear transformations: a combined analysis from thinking modes and semiotic perspectives.- .- Fostering Students' Competences in Linear Algebra with digital Resources .- Part IV. Challenging tasks with pedagogy in mind .- Linear Algebra-a Companion of Advancement in Mathematical Comprehension.- .- An algebraic/computational approach to systems of linear equations in a Linear Algebra Course for students of computer science, physics, and mathematics.- .- Nonnegative Factorisationof a Data Matrix as a Motivational Example for Basic Linear Algebra.- .- Motivating Examples, Meaning and Context in Teaching Linear Algebra.- .- Holistic Teaching and Learning Holistically, exemplified through one example from Linear Algebra.- .- Using Challenging problems in Teaching Linear Algebra

About the author

Suzanne Freeman graduated from Boston University. She has been a newspaper writer and editor and a teacher of writing at the University of Virginia, and is currently a book reviewer. She lives in Manchester with her husband and two children. She says, "I lived in Beirut as a child and remember being acutely homesick for 'American' things. I thought that nothing would be right again until I got home and had those things."

Summary

This book originated from a Discussion Group (Teaching Linear Algebra) that was held at the 13th International Conference on Mathematics Education (ICME-13). The aim was to consider and highlight current efforts regarding research and instruction on teaching and learning linear algebra from around the world, and to spark new collaborations. As the outcome of the two-day discussion at ICME-13, this book focuses on the pedagogy of linear algebra with a particular emphasis on tasks that are productive for learning. 
The main themes addressed include: theoretical perspectives on the teaching and learning of linear algebra; empirical analyses related to learning particular content in linear algebra; the use of technology and dynamic geometry software; and pedagogical discussions of challenging linear algebra tasks. 
Drawing on the expertise of mathematics education researchers and research mathematicians with experience in teaching linear algebra, this book gathers work from nine countries: Austria, Germany, Israel, Ireland, Mexico, Slovenia, Turkey, the USA and Zimbabwe.

Product details

Assisted by Christin Andrews-Larson (Editor), Christine Andrews-Larson (Editor), Avi Berman (Editor), Avi Berman et al (Editor), Sepideh Stewart (Editor), Michelle Zandieh (Editor)
Publisher Springer, Berlin
 
Languages English
Product format Hardback
Released 01.01.2018
 
EAN 9783319668109
ISBN 978-3-31-966810-9
No. of pages 382
Dimensions 164 mm x 245 mm x 25 mm
Weight 756 g
Illustrations XIII, 382 p. 89 illus.
Series ICME-13 Monographs
ICME-13 Monographs
Subjects Humanities, art, music > Education > School education, didactics, methodology

Mathematik, B, Education, Teaching, Lehrerausbildung, Mathematics, teacher training, Teaching and Teacher Education, Mathematics—Study and teaching, Mathematics Education

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