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Logical Reasoning in Formal and Everyday Reasoning Tasks

Authors :
Hugo Bronkhorst
Gerrit Roorda
Martin Goedhart
Cor Suhre
Science Education and Communication
Teaching and Teacher Education
Source :
International Journal of Science and Mathematics Education, 18(8)
Publication Year :
2019
Publisher :
Springer Science and Business Media LLC, 2019.

Abstract

Logical reasoning is of great societal importance and, as stressed by the twenty-first century skills framework, also seen as a key aspect for the development of critical thinking. This study aims at exploring secondary school students’ logical reasoning strategies in formal reasoning and everyday reasoning tasks. With task-based interviews among 4 16- and 17-year-old pre-university students, we explored their reasoning strategies and the reasoning difficulties they encounter. In this article, we present results from linear ordering tasks, tasks with invalid syllogisms and a task with implicit reasoning in a newspaper article. The linear ordering tasks and the tasks with invalid syllogisms are presented formally (with symbols) and non-formally in ordinary language (without symbols). In tasks that were familiar to our students, they used rule-based reasoning strategies and provided correct answers although their initial interpretation differed. In tasks that were unfamiliar to our students, they almost always used informal interpretations and their answers were influenced by their own knowledge. When working on the newspaper article task, the students did not use strong formal schemes, which could have provided a clear overview. At the end of the article, we present a scheme showing which reasoning strategies are used by students in different types of tasks. This scheme might increase teachers’ awareness of the variety in reasoning strategies and can guide classroom discourse during courses on logical reasoning. We suggest that using suitable formalisations and visualisations might structure and improve students’ reasoning as well.

Details

ISSN :
15731774 and 15710068
Volume :
18
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
International Journal of Science and Mathematics Education
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....3578939a8d55e867be3f1f9446ee3a65