Surfaces and Essences: Analogy as the Fuel and Fire of Thinking (131 page)

BOOK: Surfaces and Essences: Analogy as the Fuel and Fire of Thinking
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Chapter 7

The books and articles by Carey, Chi, Draaisma, Hatano and Inagaki, Keil, Lautrey, Leary, Viennot, and Tiberghien deal with naïve analogies in scientific domains, while those by Bryant, Clement, English, Fayol, Fischbein, Ginsburg, Hudson, Kieran, Kintsch and Greeno, Lakoff and Núñez, Linchevski and Vinner, Nesher, Nunes, Resnick, Schliemann, Schoenfeld, Silver, Thevenot, Tirosh, Vergnaud, and Verschaffel concern naïve analogies in arithmetic. The studies by Bassok, Brissiaud, Gamo, Richard, Sander, and Taabane are relevant to our sections on mental simulations and situations that “do the thinking for us”. Carr, Fauconnier and Turner, Norman, Sander (2008), Serres, and Tricot are relevant to our sections on computers and associated technologies. Aubusson
et al
, Ausubel, Bastien, Bruner, Mahajan, and Richard focus on educational perspectives, while Anderson, Gentner, Spalding and Murphy, and Holyoak and Thagard (and colleagues) are relevant to the section concluding this chapter.

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Aubusson, Peter J., Allan G. Harrison, and Stephen M. Ritchie (2005).
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Bastien, Claude and Mireille Bastien-Toniazzo (2004).
Apprendre à l’école.
Paris: Armand Colin.

Bassok, Miriam (1996). “Using content to interpret structure: Effects on analogical transfer”.
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, 5 (2), pp. 54–58.

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Bassok, Miriam, Valerie M. Chase, and Shirley A. Martin (1998). “Adding apples and oranges: Alignment of semantic and formal knowledge”.
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Bezout, Étienne (1833).
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Bosc-Miné, Christelle and Emmanuel Sander (2007). “Effets du contenu sur la mise en œuvre de l’inférence de complément”.
L’Année psychologique
, 107 (3), pp. 61–89.

Brissiaud, Rémi (2002). “Psychologie et didactique: Choisir des problèmes qui favorisent la conceptualisation des opérations arithmétiques”. In Jacqueline Bideaud and Henri Lehalle (eds.),
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————— (2003).
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Brissiaud, Rémi and Emmanuel Sander (2010). “Arithmetic word problem solving: A situation strategy first framework”.
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Draaisma, Douwe (2001).
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New York: Cambridge University Press.

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Hillsdale, New Jersey: Lawrence Erlbaum.

Fabre, Jean-Henri (1897).
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, Series V. Paris: Delagrave.

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Fayol, Michel (1990).
L’Enfant et le nombre.
Neuchâtel: Delachaux et Niestlé.

Fischbein, Efraim (1987).
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Dordrecht: D. Reidel.

————— (1989). “Tacit models and mathematical reasoning”.
For the Learning of Mathematics
, 9, pp. 9–14.

————— (1994). “Tacit models”. In Dina Tirosh (ed.),
Implicit and Explicit Knowledge: An Educational Approach.
Norwood, New Jersey: Ablex Publishing, pp. 97–109.

BOOK: Surfaces and Essences: Analogy as the Fuel and Fire of Thinking
5.09Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
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