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13 votes
3 answers
3k views

How many of "The Seven Laws of Teaching" are still relevant for teaching maths today?

Wikipedia shows that in 1886 John Milton Gregory outlined his "The Seven Laws of Teaching"; asserting that a teacher should: Know thoroughly and familiarly the lesson you wish to teach; ...
user 85795's user avatar
11 votes
3 answers
411 views

Transitioning proof based math courses online

I'd love to learn from anyone's recent experiences teaching online proof based math courses, especially those that have a large group of students who will be working asynchronously. My usual proof ...
Mathprof's user avatar
  • 1,215
2 votes
0 answers
91 views

Teaching aid for online mathematics course

Crossposting from the math.stackexchange (Question) Online classes will start again as the semester will start, I bought an XP-Pen deco 03 to help me with online teaching. I will be teaching ...
mukhujje's user avatar
  • 159
3 votes
1 answer
171 views

Existing Tools for Math Expression Equivalence Logic

Note - this question was posted here and garnered some decent replies before it was closed as off-topic in Stack Overflow. Online systems, such as ALEKS, Cengage's WebAssign, and even Khan Academy ...
Zediiiii's user avatar
  • 175
8 votes
2 answers
210 views

Can a constructivist learning model be applied to online lower division math courses?

I'm using the word constructivist as it is used in this paper, not in the sense used in logic. The abstract should be sufficient to understand at least roughly what the model is. The important part, ...
Alexander Gruber's user avatar