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- Work on a specific problem
- Problems must be short
- Individual problems must not require much detail
- Presentation:
- Distill what's important
- Communicating it to others
- Presentations repeat common themes often
- Generalizing the process of solving that problem
- What is portable to different problems?
- Synthesize problems as a group
- Group brainstorming
- What are the good nuggets?
- Sensemaking
- Current epistemological stance:
- Do many examples of the same thing
- Student request: “do examples that are not in the book”
Liz's cm capstone is a counterexample. There, the problems are long with much detail. She uses the inverse compare and contrast. Many techniques looking at the same problem (pendulum) using this example as a framework for students to compare and contrast techniques.
- Strong content goals
- Often a chance to examine special cases
- Thinking Processes:
- Students practice drawing inferences
- Students practice recognizing patterns
- Professor models asking professional questions
- Query students expectations vs. look at implications for earlier things.
- Changing epistemology
- Looking at characteristics of physical things:
- multiple representations
- chunking
- What kind of a beast is it?
- refining resources