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<div style="padding: 4px; text-align: center; font-size:120%; border-bottom: solid 1px #3e5389; margin-bottom:5px;">Featured Publication</div>
 
<div style="padding: 4px; text-align: center; font-size:120%; border-bottom: solid 1px #3e5389; margin-bottom:5px;">Featured Publication</div>
[[PublishedWork:How_Many_Sources_Do_I_Need%3F|How many sources do I need?]] is an award wining paper by Leah Shopkow. It covers the bottleneck of identifying sources for a History paper.
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[[How_Many_Sources_Do_I_Need%3F|How many sources do I need?]] is an award wining paper by Leah Shopkow. It covers the bottleneck of identifying sources for a History paper.
 
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Revision as of 18:00, 24 July 2024


Decoding the Disciplines is a process for increasing student learning by narrowing the gap between expert and novice thinking. Beginning with the identification of bottlenecks to learning in particular disciplines, it seeks to make explicit the tacit knowledge of experts and to help students master the mental actions they need for success in particular courses.

This wiki is intended to foster student learning by

  • providing information on how to practice Decoding the Disciplines

Learn how to contribute, engage, and share your work and to join the Decoding community.

Featured Decoding Work
graphical illustration of the five phases that commence group work
Five phases which commence group work

Group activities are an integral part of teaching. Often they consist of tasks given to students in order to work on them collectively. However, it cannot be assumed that students consciously or subconsciously perform operations that allow them to get started with problem solving in group tasks (Full article ...)

Did you know?

When mathematicians think of limits, "approaching" has a very nuanced meaning - an amalgam of "dancing" and "getting closer."

Featured Bottlenecks
  • Scope of formula: When using a mathematical formula students don’t check whether the prerequisites for the applicability of this formula apply.
  • Student have troubles understanding the ergative case, used in languages like Basque, Georgian, and Tibetian.
  • Students find it difficult to view Home as a constructed ideal.

See also the list of bottlenecks collected in this wiki.

Featured Publication

How many sources do I need? is an award wining paper by Leah Shopkow. It covers the bottleneck of identifying sources for a History paper.