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by JustinSkycak
709 days ago
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This is only one piece within a larger argument. You need to read on to understand what the rest of the argument is. The form of the argument is this: there is no direct evidence for X, but there is a mountain of circumstantial evidence supporting "not X", so therefore, almost certainly, "not X." X = "we can teach students how to solve problems in general, and that will make them good mathematicians able to discover novel solutions irrespective of the content" |
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I have read the rest of the argument. However, my take upon reading it is that this is just one more contribution in a back-and-forth argument about every aspect that has been studied in math education. Despite the fact that this was published in 2010, the landscape in 2024 very much points to "it's unclear" as the answer to "is [anything] effective?", at least for me, unfortunately.