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Creators/Authors contains: "Ellis, A.B."

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  1. Lischka, A. E. (Ed.)
  2. E. de Vries, E.; null; null (Ed.)
  3. Identifying patterns is an important part of mathematical investigation, but many students struggle to justify their pattern-based generalizations. These findings have led some to argue for a de-emphasis on patterning, but others argue that it can support insight into a problem’s structure. We introduce a phenomenon, empirical re-conceptualization, in which learners generalize based on an empirical pattern, and then re-interpret it from a structural perspective. We elaborate this construct by providing a representative example of empirical reconceptualization from two secondary students. Our findings indicate that developing empirical results can foster subsequent insights, which can in turn lead to justification and proof. 
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  4. Identifying patterns is an important part of mathematical investigation, but many students struggle to explain or justify their pattern-based generalizations or conjectures. These findings have led some researchers to argue for a de-emphasis on pattern-based activities, but others argue that empirical investigation can support the discovery of insight into a problem’s structure. We introduce a phenomenon we call empirical re-conceptualization, in which learners identify a conjecture based on an empirical pattern, and then re-interpret that conjecture from a structural perspective. We elaborate this construct by drawing on interview data from undergraduate calculus students and research mathematicians, providing a representative example of empirical re-conceptualization from each participant group. Our findings indicate that developing empirical results can foster subsequent insights, which can in turn lead to justification and proof. 
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  5. null (Ed.)
  6. null (Ed.)