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Question: Why is it so difficult for a student to write a coherent argument?

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Presentation on theme: "Question: Why is it so difficult for a student to write a coherent argument?"— Presentation transcript:

1 Question: Why is it so difficult for a student to write a coherent argument?

2 I try to address two issues with my students: – Understanding Language – Parsing Logic

3 Rules for Beginners 1.Always phrase the thing you are proving as an “If…then” sentence. When you cannot, be content with one that starts, “There…exists.” 2.Always start a proof with the word “Assume” and then copy the hypothesis. Start with a new “Assume” every time you hit an “and.” 3.To prove, “There exists x such that…” Write down “x = “ even if you cannot finish the thought.

4 Facts about Beginners They will never do any of this.

5 The Concept of the “Minitheorem.” After every assumption you make, you have reduced your objective to a minitheorem. Ask yourself, “What do I need to prove now?” Revert back to the rules for beginners.

6 Example: Prove that if x and y are real numbers with x<y, then for all natural numbers n, there are real numbers z 1, z 2, z 3,… z n so that for all j=1,2,…n x < z 1 < z 2 < z 3 <… < z n <y

7 Assume x and y are real numbers. Assume x<y. Minitheorem: For all natural numbers n, there are real numbers z 1, z 2, z 3,… z n so that for all j=1,2,…n x < z 1 < z 2 < z 3 <… < z n <y

8 Assume x and y are real numbers. Assume x<y. Proof by Induction: Minitheorem: There are real numbers z 1, z 2, z 3,… z n so that for all j=1,2,…n x < z 1 < z 2 < z 3 <… < z n <y

9 Assume x and y are real numbers. Assume x<y. Proof by Induction: Base Step: For n=1, there are real numbers z 1, z 2, z 3,… z n, so that x < z 1 < z 2 < z 3 <… < z n <y. Inductive Step: If for n, there are real numbers z 1, z 2, z 3,… z n so that x < z 1 < z 2 < z 3 <… < z n <y, then for n+1, there are real numbers z 1, z 2, z 3,… z n+1 so that x < z 1 < z 2 < z 3 <… < z n+1 <y.

10 Assume x and y are real numbers. Assume x<y. Proof by Induction: Base Step: For n=1, there is a real numbers z 1 so that x < z 1 <y. Proof: Let z 1 =……..

11 Assume x and y are real numbers. Assume x<y. Inductive Step: If for n, there are real numbers z 1, z 2, z 3,… z n so that x < z 1 < z 2 < z 3 <… < z n <y, then for n+1, there are real numbers z 1, z 2, z 3,… z n+1 so that x < z 1 < z 2 < z 3 <… < z n+1 <y.

12 Assume x and y are real numbers. Assume x<y. Proof by Induction: Base Step Inductive step: Minitheorem: If there are real numbers z 1, z 2, z 3,… z n so that x < z 1 < z 2 < z 3 <… < z n <y, then for there are real numbers z 1, z 2, z 3,… z n+1 so that x < z 1 < z 2 < z 3 <… < z n+1 <y. Proof: Assume there are real numbers z 1, z 2, z 3,… z n so that x < z 1 < z 2 < z 3 <… < z n <y. Let z n+1 =


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