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> What I found especially frustrating was when a worked example solved a special case with a unique approach, and the general case required a much more involved method that wasn't explained particularly well. Amusingly, many people think the solution to this is "abandon worked examples and focus exclusively on trying to teach general problem-solving skills," which doesn't really work in practice (or even in theory). That seems to be the most common approach in higher math, especially once you get into serious math-major courses like Real Analysis and Abstract Algebra. What actually works in practice is simply creating more worked examples, organizing them well, and giving students practice with problems like each worked example before moving them onto the next worked example covering a slightly more challenging case. You can get really, really far with this approach, but most educational resources shy away from it or give up really early because it's so much damn work! ;) |