Defining and demonstrating an equivalence way of thinking in enumerative combinatorics |
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Affiliation: | 1. Oregon State University, 064 Kidder Hall, Department of Mathematics, Corvallis, OR, 97331, United States;2. Oklahoma State University, 420 Math Sciences Building, Stillwater, OK, 74075, United States |
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Abstract: | Counting problems offer opportunities for rich mathematical thinking, and yet there is evidence that students struggle to solve counting problems correctly. There is a need to identify useful approaches and thought processes that can help students be successful in their combinatorial activity. In this paper, we propose a characterization of an equivalence way of thinking, we discuss examples of how it arises mathematically in a variety of combinatorial concepts, and we offer episodes from a paired teaching experiment with undergraduate students that demonstrate useful ways in which students developed and leverage this way of thinking. Ultimately, we argue that this way of thinking can apply to a variety of combinatorial situations, and we make the case that it is a valuable way of thinking that should be prioritized for students learning combinatorics. |
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Keywords: | Equivalence Combinatorics Discrete mathematics Ways of thinking |
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