This article presents an Exponential Growth Learning Trajectory (EGLT), a trajectory identifying and characterizing middle grade students' initial and developing understanding of exponential growth as a result of an instructional emphasis on covariation. The EGLT explicates students' thinking and learning over time in relation to a set of tasks and activities developed to engender a view of exponential growth as a relation between two continuously covarying quantities. Developed out of two teaching experiments with early adolescents, the EGLT identifies three major stages of students' conceptual development: prefunctional reasoning, the covariation view, and the correspondence view. The learning trajectory is presented along with three indi...
In this paper we use learning trajectories to study 11th grade students’ conceptualization of functi...
In order to teach exponential functions as well as to study the process of conceptualization through...
Exponential growth bias is the phenomenon that humans intuitively underestimate exponential growth. ...
This article presents the results of a teaching experiment with middle school students who explored ...
Exponential functions are important topic in school algebra and in higher mathematics, but research ...
Previous studies have suggested that children as young as 9 years old have developed an understandin...
© 2017 Elsevier Inc. While there has been a recent expansion of research related to the development ...
This lesson plan from ATEEC will help students learn the concept of exponential growth, as well as i...
Forming part of a wider research study, the current study investigated prospective middle school mat...
Forming part of a wider research study, the current study investigated prospective middle school mat...
Researchers have indicated that students have difficulties recognizing quadratic and exponential cha...
In any given classroom, students are likely to be at very different points in their learning and dev...
In this article, we report on a design experiment conducted in an 8th grade classroom that focused o...
This assignment is on linear and exponential growth, which is connected to real life scenarios from ...
We describe the development and implementation of a learning progression specifying transitions in r...
In this paper we use learning trajectories to study 11th grade students’ conceptualization of functi...
In order to teach exponential functions as well as to study the process of conceptualization through...
Exponential growth bias is the phenomenon that humans intuitively underestimate exponential growth. ...
This article presents the results of a teaching experiment with middle school students who explored ...
Exponential functions are important topic in school algebra and in higher mathematics, but research ...
Previous studies have suggested that children as young as 9 years old have developed an understandin...
© 2017 Elsevier Inc. While there has been a recent expansion of research related to the development ...
This lesson plan from ATEEC will help students learn the concept of exponential growth, as well as i...
Forming part of a wider research study, the current study investigated prospective middle school mat...
Forming part of a wider research study, the current study investigated prospective middle school mat...
Researchers have indicated that students have difficulties recognizing quadratic and exponential cha...
In any given classroom, students are likely to be at very different points in their learning and dev...
In this article, we report on a design experiment conducted in an 8th grade classroom that focused o...
This assignment is on linear and exponential growth, which is connected to real life scenarios from ...
We describe the development and implementation of a learning progression specifying transitions in r...
In this paper we use learning trajectories to study 11th grade students’ conceptualization of functi...
In order to teach exponential functions as well as to study the process of conceptualization through...
Exponential growth bias is the phenomenon that humans intuitively underestimate exponential growth. ...