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Student reasoning about the signs of backward definite integrals in mathematics and physics

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Abstract

Researchers have documented student difficulties with the signs of definite integrals in both physics and calculus, particularly negative integrals. Less studied are how students reason about the sign of a “backward definite integral”, i.e., taken right to left, which is important in several physical contexts. We report on two related studies that explore student reasoning about backward integrals in graphical and/or symbolic representations. Our analysis uses the concept image framework and a recent categorical framework for mathematical sense making. The concept images of dx and ?x affected student reasoning. We found four prevalent ways students made sense of the integral signs: invoking the Fundamental Theorem of Calculus, using macroscopic area under the curve (spatial or graphical), considering the Riemann sum (microscopic area, both types), and using a physical context. Students were better able to interpret backward integrals when they linked the mathematical concepts of integrals to some physical context beyond spatial area, whether self-generated or prompted. The context seemed to provide meaning to the difference represented by ?x or dx and thus to the sign of that difference and the definite integral.

Publication: R. R. Bajracharya, V. L. Sealey, and J. R. Thompson, "Student understanding of the sign of negative definite integrals in mathematics and physics," accepted for publication in International Journal of Research in Undergraduate Mathematics Education, Special Issue on The Teaching and Learning of Definite Integrals, R. Ely & S. R. Jones, Eds.<br>V. L. Sealey and J. R. Thompson, "Students' interpretation and justification of 'backward' definite integrals," in Proceedings of the 19th Annual Conference on Research in Undergraduate Mathematics Education, pp. 410-418 (Mathematical Association of America, 2016).<br>R. R. Bajracharya, T. M. Wemyss, J. R. Thompson, "Student interpretation of the signs of definite integrals using graphical representations," in 2011 Physics Education Research Conference, C. Singh, N.S. Rebello, P. Engelhardt, eds., AIP Conference Proceedings 1413, 111-114 (2012).

Presenters

  • John R Thompson

    University of Maine

Authors

  • John R Thompson

    University of Maine

  • Rabindra R Bajracharya

    Missouri Southern State University

  • Vicky L Sealey

    West Virginia University