Abstract
The present study tries to identify the 'picture in mind' that students' have about defining, proving and modelling. We access to it through external representations of their mental representations; in particular, from the way in which these representations are expressed in written form (sentences and situations). In the study we have identified different ways of considering defining, proving and modelling: superficial, utilitarian and intrinsic, which were maintained by some students for the three elements in the different written representations. This coherence can be perceived as a characteristic of students' mathematical understanding. Our results provide an analytical scheme whose domain goes beyond the way of students' approaching to the mathematical elements considered in the study. © 2012 by ESER, Eurasian Society of Educational Research.
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Sánchez, V., & García, M. (2012). What “picture in mind” do secondary students have about defining, proving, and modelling? Eurasia Journal of Mathematics, Science and Technology Education, 8(2), 95–102. https://doi.org/10.12973/eurasia.2012.823a
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