What students can learn from Fibonacci´s error in solving “The lion in the pit” problem

This initial study presents the results of the classroom implementation of a learning sequence derived from Fibonacci’s error in solving ‘The lion in the pit’ problem. The study was carried out with 35 physics students in a general first-semester course ‘Development of complex-thinking skills’. The...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Josip Slisko
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Universidad Distrital Francisco José de Caldas 2020-05-01
Series:Góndola, Enseñanza y Aprendizaje de las Ciencias
Subjects:
Online Access:https://revistas.udistrital.edu.co/index.php/GDLA/article/view/16041
id doaj-725858bda1724e22aec31e00b49fa4b4
record_format Article
spelling doaj-725858bda1724e22aec31e00b49fa4b42020-11-25T04:06:12ZengUniversidad Distrital Francisco José de CaldasGóndola, Enseñanza y Aprendizaje de las Ciencias2665-33032346-47122020-05-0115221623810.14483/23464712.1604116041What students can learn from Fibonacci´s error in solving “The lion in the pit” problemJosip Slisko0https://orcid.org/0000-0002-5805-4808Benemérita Universidad Autónoma de Puebla, MéxicoThis initial study presents the results of the classroom implementation of a learning sequence derived from Fibonacci’s error in solving ‘The lion in the pit’ problem. The study was carried out with 35 physics students in a general first-semester course ‘Development of complex-thinking skills’. The learning sequence was implemented as a paper-and-pencil activity in personal and group modes. The most important results are the following: (a) Students were able to provide an acceptable procedure about how Fibonacci might get the wrong answer, (b) students can argue why that answer is wrong, (c) some students’ solutions presented good conceptual and procedural clarity, frequently missed in historic literature, and (d) students grasped the importance of knowing about errors made by famous mathematicians in two connected aspects: mathematics is a human activity prone to errors and, consequently, fear of errors shouldn’t be an obstacle in learning of school mathematics.https://revistas.udistrital.edu.co/index.php/GDLA/article/view/16041fibonacci’s errorusing history of mathematics in classroomlearning from errorsproblem-solving
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Josip Slisko
spellingShingle Josip Slisko
What students can learn from Fibonacci´s error in solving “The lion in the pit” problem
Góndola, Enseñanza y Aprendizaje de las Ciencias
fibonacci’s error
using history of mathematics in classroom
learning from errors
problem-solving
author_facet Josip Slisko
author_sort Josip Slisko
title What students can learn from Fibonacci´s error in solving “The lion in the pit” problem
title_short What students can learn from Fibonacci´s error in solving “The lion in the pit” problem
title_full What students can learn from Fibonacci´s error in solving “The lion in the pit” problem
title_fullStr What students can learn from Fibonacci´s error in solving “The lion in the pit” problem
title_full_unstemmed What students can learn from Fibonacci´s error in solving “The lion in the pit” problem
title_sort what students can learn from fibonacci´s error in solving “the lion in the pit” problem
publisher Universidad Distrital Francisco José de Caldas
series Góndola, Enseñanza y Aprendizaje de las Ciencias
issn 2665-3303
2346-4712
publishDate 2020-05-01
description This initial study presents the results of the classroom implementation of a learning sequence derived from Fibonacci’s error in solving ‘The lion in the pit’ problem. The study was carried out with 35 physics students in a general first-semester course ‘Development of complex-thinking skills’. The learning sequence was implemented as a paper-and-pencil activity in personal and group modes. The most important results are the following: (a) Students were able to provide an acceptable procedure about how Fibonacci might get the wrong answer, (b) students can argue why that answer is wrong, (c) some students’ solutions presented good conceptual and procedural clarity, frequently missed in historic literature, and (d) students grasped the importance of knowing about errors made by famous mathematicians in two connected aspects: mathematics is a human activity prone to errors and, consequently, fear of errors shouldn’t be an obstacle in learning of school mathematics.
topic fibonacci’s error
using history of mathematics in classroom
learning from errors
problem-solving
url https://revistas.udistrital.edu.co/index.php/GDLA/article/view/16041
work_keys_str_mv AT josipslisko whatstudentscanlearnfromfibonacciserrorinsolvingthelioninthepitproblem
_version_ 1724431912783577088