If you've been teaching high school math for a while, then you are familiar with common algebra mistakes that students make. In this post, I will address some of these errors and give suggestions on how to fix them (a.k.a. "the treatment").
The errors mentioned in this post are mistakes that I have seen from my Precalculus and Calculus students.
Students can use this logic to check their answer by squaring their answer (e.g. x+2) to see if they get the expression under the radical (x² + 4).
After going through the Quotient Rule for Differentiation examples, I went through this slide with my students. |
After doing u-substitution examples for integration, I went through this slide with my students. |
To correct most of these procedural errors, students must become more familiar with the rules, properties, and theorems in mathematics. In other words, you've got to know the rules if you want to play the game!
Think of the first time you learned to play Monopoly or Uno. Probably someone was there to teach you. Perhaps that person read the rules and How to Play that came in the box. Or maybe someone just said, "the best way to learn to play is to play," and then taught you the rules as you went along.
Well, learning algebra is a bit like that. You have to know what the rules, properties, theorems, and constraints are before you can "play" algebra.