Difference between revisions of "Completely justified example"
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− | An example displays a problem and a sequence of steps leading up to an answer. If the example is "completely justified," then each of the steps includes a description of the reasoning that generates it, which is usually the application of one or more knowledge components. For instance, Suppose the problem is "Solve 2x+3=10 for x." A completely justified example, written in traditional 2-column format, is: | + | An [[example]] displays a problem and a sequence of steps leading up to an answer. If the example is "completely justified," then each of the steps includes a description of the reasoning that generates it, which is usually the application of one or more knowledge components. For instance, Suppose the problem is "Solve 2x+3=10 for x." A completely justified example, written in traditional 2-column format, is: |
* 2x+3=10 Given | * 2x+3=10 Given | ||
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[[Category:Glossary]] | [[Category:Glossary]] | ||
− | [[Category:Ringenberg Examples-as- | + | [[Category:Ringenberg Examples-as-Help]] |
Latest revision as of 22:04, 30 January 2007
An example displays a problem and a sequence of steps leading up to an answer. If the example is "completely justified," then each of the steps includes a description of the reasoning that generates it, which is usually the application of one or more knowledge components. For instance, Suppose the problem is "Solve 2x+3=10 for x." A completely justified example, written in traditional 2-column format, is:
- 2x+3=10 Given
- 2x=10-3 Subtract-both-sides
- 2x=7 Simplify
- x = 7/2 Divide-both-sides
- x = 3.5 Simplify
The equations are the steps; the text after each equation is its justification.