Articles
On the psychology of mathematical problem solving by gifted students
Published:
2015-12-01
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Keywords
methodology and psychology of mathematical problem solving competitions inspiration intuition heuristics teaching mathematics gifted pupils
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Copyright (c) 2015 Sandor M. Veres
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.
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Veres, S. M. (2015). On the psychology of mathematical problem solving by gifted students. Teaching Mathematics and Computer Science, 13(2), 289-301. https://doi.org/10.5485/TMCS.2015.0405
Abstract
This paper examines the nature of mathematical problem solving from a psychological viewpoint as a sequence of mental steps. The scope is limited to solution processes for well defined problems, for instance, which occur at International Mathematical Olympiads. First the meta-mathematical background is outlined in order to present problem solving as a well defined search problem and hence as a discovery process. Solving problems is described as a sequence of elementary steps of the so called "relationship-vision" introduced here. Finally, non-procedural aspects of the psychology of problem solving are summarized, such as the role of persistence, teacher-pupil relationship, the amount of experience needed, self-confidence and inspiration at competitions.