Capturing Diversity in the Classroom: Uncovering Patterns of Difficulty with Simple Addition

Author(s):  
Sarah Hopkins ◽  
Celéste de Villiers
Keyword(s):  
2011 ◽  
Vol 70 (1) ◽  
pp. 35-39 ◽  
Author(s):  
Muriel Fanget ◽  
Catherine Thevenot ◽  
Caroline Castel ◽  
Michel Fayol

In this study, we used a paradigm recently developed ( Thevenot, Fanget, & Fayol, 2007 ) to determine whether 10-year-old children solve simple addition problems by retrieval of the answer from long-term memory or by calculation procedures. Our paradigm is unique in that it does not rely on reaction times or verbal reports, which are known to potentially bias the results, especially in children. Rather, it takes advantage of the fact that calculation procedures degrade the memory traces of the operands, so that it is more difficult to recognize them when they have been involved in the solution of an addition problem by calculation rather than by retrieval. The present study sharpens the current conclusions in the literature and shows that, when the sum of addition problems is up to 10, children mainly use retrieval, but when it is greater than 10, they mainly use calculation procedures.


1975 ◽  
Vol 12 (2) ◽  
pp. 289-299 ◽  
Author(s):  
Richard A. F. Grieve ◽  
John Gittins

Coronas of orthopyroxene, amphibole and spinel, and occasional garnet occur between olivine and plagioclase in olivine gabbros and troctolites of the Hadlington gabbroic complex. Microprobe analyses show that changes in olivine composition are mirrored in the composition of the corona minerals. Textural evidence indicates that corona formation was sub-solidus and Mg–Fe partitioning between ortho- and clinopyroxene suggests temperatures below 850 °C. Calculations of earlier models for corona formation based on equal volume replacement, or the simple addition of silica or alumina, fail to yield a satisfactory chemical balance. Olivine and plagioclase, with the addition of water, can supply the material needed for corona formation only if a migrating reaction boundary and change in olivine composition are considered.


2021 ◽  
Vol 224 ◽  
pp. 110990
Author(s):  
Saad Sarwar ◽  
Sunghyeok Park ◽  
Thuy Thi Dao ◽  
Sungjun Hong ◽  
Chi-Hwan Han
Keyword(s):  

2020 ◽  
pp. 1-11
Author(s):  
Dawei Yu ◽  
Jie Yang ◽  
Yun Zhang ◽  
Shujuan Yu

The Densely Connected Network (DenseNet) has been widely recognized as a highly competitive architecture in Deep Neural Networks. And its most outstanding property is called Dense Connections, which represent each layer’s input by concatenating all the preceding layers’ outputs and thus improve the performance by encouraging feature reuse to the extreme. However, it is Dense Connections that cause the challenge of dimension-enlarging, making DenseNet very resource-intensive and low efficiency. In the light of this, inspired by the Residual Network (ResNet), we propose an improved DenseNet named Additive DenseNet, which features replacing concatenation operations (used in Dense Connections) with addition operations (used in ResNet), and in terms of feature reuse, it upgrades addition operations to accumulating operations (namely ∑ (·)), thus enables each layer’s input to be the summation of all the preceding layers’ outputs. Consequently, Additive DenseNet can not only preserve the dimension of input from enlarging, but also retain the effect of Dense Connections. In this paper, Additive DenseNet is applied to text classification task. The experimental results reveal that compared to DenseNet, our Additive DenseNet can reduce the model complexity by a large margin, such as GPU memory usage and quantity of parameters. And despite its high resource economy, Additive DenseNet can still outperform DenseNet on 6 text classification datasets in terms of accuracy and show competitive performance for model training.


2018 ◽  
Vol 18 (3-4) ◽  
pp. 390-405 ◽  
Author(s):  
PEDRO CABALAR ◽  
JORGE FANDINNO ◽  
LUIS FARIÑAS DEL CERRO ◽  
DAVID PEARCE

AbstractIn this paper, we propose a variant of Answer Set Programming (ASP) with evaluable functions that extends their application to sets of objects, something that allows a fully logical treatment of aggregates. Formally, we start from the syntax of First Order Logic with equality and the semantics of Quantified Equilibrium Logic with evaluable functions (${\rm QEL}^=_{\cal F}$). Then, we proceed to incorporate a new kind of logical term,intensional set(a construct commonly used to denote the set of objects characterised by a given formula), and to extend${\rm QEL}^=_{\cal F}$semantics for this new type of expression. In our extended approach, intensional sets can be arbitrarily used as predicate or function arguments or even nested inside other intensional sets, just as regular first-order logical terms. As a result, aggregates can be naturally formed by the application of some evaluable function (count,sum,maximum, etc) to a set of objects expressed as an intensional set. This approach has several advantages. First, while other semantics for aggregates depend on some syntactic transformation (either via a reduct or a formula translation), the${\rm QEL}^=_{\cal F}$interpretation treats them as regular evaluable functions, providing a compositional semantics and avoiding any kind of syntactic restriction. Second, aggregates can be explicitly defined now within the logical language by the simple addition of formulas that fix their meaning in terms of multiple applications of some (commutative and associative) binary operation. For instance, we can use recursive rules to definesumin terms of integer addition. Last, but not least, we prove that the semantics we obtain for aggregates coincides with the one defined by Gelfond and Zhang for the${\cal A}\mathit{log}$language, when we restrict to that syntactic fragment.


2018 ◽  
Vol 16 (2) ◽  
pp. 248-265
Author(s):  
Dwi Rini Sovia Firdaus ◽  
Djuara Lubis ◽  
Endriatmo Soetarto ◽  
Djoko Susanto

The people of West Sumatra, who have been adhering to the Minangkabau matrilineal cultural tradition, are currently experiencing cultural decay. Many studies speculate that the unique Minangkabau culture will not be too much disturbed by the influx of globalization because in essence the only part that will be eroded is the peripheral part, while the core will remain preserved for all time. This study photographed the people of Tanjung Raya District based on existing family typologies, then saw a shift in norms passed on to teenagers using the six Hofstede cultural dimensions. This study surveyed five types of families with calculations using a simple addition operation. The results of the questionnaire were made high and low criteria, then presented in cobweb graphical form. The assessment indicators are based on the six dimensions of Hofstede's culture. Shifting the teachings of exemplary teachings from Minangkabau culture is determined using the ANOVA test. The results of this study are to map the portrait of Minangkabau culture according to Hofstede and a portrait of each of Hofstede's dimensions in each type of family in Tanjung Raya District. From there, it can be seen how far away the approach of the values taught by the family towards Minangkabau culture is approaching.


2004 ◽  
Vol 4 (4) ◽  
pp. 121-128 ◽  
Author(s):  
L. Wei ◽  
L. Yong-Mei

Natural organic materials (NOMs) have a very strong influence on the stability of inorganic particles through interactions (e.g. adsorption, coating, and so on), and thus make the surface water with high NOM content difficult to be coagulated. In this study, standard jar tests and a pilot study were conducted to evaluate the effectiveness of ferrate pre-oxidation in enhancing the coagulation of NOM-rich lake water. A substantial reduction of residual turbidity after sedimentation and filtration was obtained by ferrate pre-oxidation at low dosage (1–5 mg L‒1 as K2FeO4). It was suggested that in order to maintain an acceptable residual turbidity, ferrate pre-oxidation can substantially reduce the dosage of coagulant. The improvement of water quality, as indicated by the reduction of color, DOC, iron, manganese, total bacteria, was observed to be similar in nature to the enhancement of residual turbidity. Formation of additional coagulant (Fe (III)) after decomposition was believed to be an important role of ferrate in enhancing coagulation. Ferrate could be employed in drinking water treatment by simple addition of ferrate solution just before coagulation.


2018 ◽  
Vol 5 (1) ◽  
pp. 8
Author(s):  
Rickard Ostergren ◽  
Marie Ringborg Lindgren ◽  
Britt-Marie Lindgren ◽  
Joakim Samuelsson

An organizing structure that in recent years has had a major impact on how to work with students who don’t respond to regular instruction is Response to Intervention (RTI). Efforts in RTI are divided into three different tiers of instruction: primary, secondary and tertiary. In our study, we investigate the impact of intensive secondary-tier instruction on students’ knowledge of basic combinations of digits in addition. We also focus on how the students develop their use of more advanced calculations in addition during the intervention.The results showed that students became faster at performing simple addition tasks, which indicates that their fluency – declarative knowledge – developed during the intervention phase. Our results thereby strengthen suggestions that a secondary-tier intervention level should take place in a small group of students 20-40 minutes four to five times a week. Meanwhile, the students developed their ability to solve two-digit arithmetic tasks in addition and subtraction, which could be explained by the fact that students had automated simple number combinations and thus could focus on the calculation procedure.


2003 ◽  
Vol 69 (1) ◽  
pp. 517-523 ◽  
Author(s):  
Carey A. Pashley ◽  
Tanya Parish ◽  
Ruth A. McAdam ◽  
Ken Duncan ◽  
Neil G. Stoker

ABSTRACT A simple and efficient delivery system was developed for making targeted gene knockouts in Mycobacterium smegmatis. This delivery system relies on the use of a pair of replicating plasmids, which are incompatible. Incompatible plasmids share elements of the same replication machinery and so compete with each other during both replication and partitioning into daughter cells. Such plasmids can be maintained together in the presence of antibiotics; however, removal of selection leads to the loss of one or both plasmids. For mutagenesis, two replicating plasmids based on pAL5000 are introduced; one of these plasmids carries a mutated allele of the targeted gene. Homologous recombination is allowed to take place, and either one or both of the vectors are lost through the pressure of incompatibility, allowing the phenotypic effects of the mutant to be studied. Several different plasmid combinations were tested to optimize loss in the absence of antibiotic selection. pAL5000 carries two replication genes (repA and repB), which act in trans, and the use of vectors that each lack one rep gene and complement each other resulted in the loss of both plasmids in M. smegmatis and Mycobacterium bovis BCG. The rate of loss was increased by the incorporation of an additional incompatibility region in one of the plasmids. To facilitate cloning when the system was used, we constructed plasmid vector pairs that allow simple addition of selection and screening genes on flexible gene cassettes. Using this system, we demonstrated that M. smegmatis pyrF mutants could be isolated at high frequency. This method should also be useful in other species in which pAL5000 replicates, including Mycobacterium tuberculosis.


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