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Theoretical models of the role of visualisation in learning formal reasoning (2002)

Abstract
Although there is empirical evidence that visualisation tools can help students to learn formal subjects such as logic, and although particular strategies and conceptual difficulties have been identified, it has so far proved difficult to provide a general model of learning in this context that accounts for these findings in a systematic way. In this paper, four attempts at explaining the relative difficulty of formal concepts and the role of visualisation in this learning process are presented. These explanations draw on several existing theories, including Vygotsky's Zone of Proximal Development, Green's Cognitive Dimensions, the Popper-Campbell model of conjectural learning, and cognitive complexity. The paper concludes with a comparison of the utility and applicability of the different models. It is also accompanied by a reflexive commentary[0] (linked to this paper as a hypertext) that examines the ways in which theory has been used within these arguments, and which attempts to relate these uses to the wider context of learning technology research.

Publication details
Download http://oro.open.ac.uk/262/
Repository The Open University Library's e-prints Archive (United Kingdom)
Type Journal Article, NonPeerReviewed
Relation http://oro.open.ac.uk/262/01/oliver-aczel-02-3.pdf
http://www-jime.open.ac.uk/2002/3/oliver-aczel-02-3-t.html

Cited publications (4)
Influences of Software Design on Formal Reasoning (1999)
Pragmatic versus syntactic approaches to training deductive reasoning (1986)
Mental models: Towards a cognitive science of language, inference, and consciousness (1983)
[El desarrollo de los procesos psicológicos superiores] (1978)