Drawing physical insight from mathematics via extreme case reasoning Documents

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Drawing physical insight from mathematics via extreme case reasoning 

written by Mark Eichenlaub, Deborah Hemingway, and Edward F. Redish

Students often get stuck in problem solving, ignoring their physical intuition in favor of plug-and-chug or pattern-matching approaches. We suggest that examining the extreme cases is a useful way of moving students towards more expert-like problem solving. Based on a case study, we show that novice students can quickly learn to use extreme cases productively in problem-solving. In reasoning about extreme cases, students blend conceptual and mathematical cognitive resources. At the same time, they can generate new and creative uses for extreme-case reasoning, here recasting it from a tool for evaluating answers to one for generating them. Extreme case reasoning may prove a valuable instructional goal at the introductory level.

Last Modified December 26, 2016

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