> Richard recently wrote:
> 
> > [clip]
> > Look! The definition of Level 3 is not complicated; it's just that 
> > it doesn't make sense to a Level-2'er. There's a mind mechanism 
> > that has not yet been developed in the Level-2 mind. It has to do 
> > with flexible modeling, position shifting, and consciousness of 
> > purpose. The Level-2 mind thinks about this for about 3 seconds, 
> > then goes into distinguish-and-discard mode, mapping it onto some 
> > poor excuse for a Level-2 analogy and producing all the 
> > contradictory "definitions" of Level 3 that have been "bandied 
> > about on the list." Cut it out!
> > [clip]
> 
> Could you please repost the 'real definition' of level 3?  I have 
> not been on the list terribly long, and have probably only seen 
> the contradictory definitions.  Anyway, I don't see why any old 
> mind can't learn flexible modeling, position shifting, and 
> consciousness of purpose, and consequently I don't see why we 
> need a level 3 distinction meme.
> 
> 
> - JPSchneider
> - jschneid@hanoverdirect.com
JPSchneider, when I first saw this level-2/level-3 terminology: my initial 
reactions were what yours appear to be now.
I don't see what you don't see above, either.  I *do* observe it, in 
every math class I teach recitation for.
If the apparent impossibility were not superficially real, the mathematics 
exams at K-State would be *much* more difficult!
=====
Example:
One of the questions on a recent Calc I exam suffered a design error.  
[Algebra is, of course, required to have a ghost of a chance.]
Instead of requiring knowledge of:
     The "product rule" [whatever that is]
     The rules for derivatives of "tangent" and "cotangent" [whatever 
those are]
     The "chain rule" [whatever that is], twice
It really required knowledge of:
     Definition of "tangent" and "cotangent"
     The constant rule: constant functions are always horizontal, so the 
answer is 0.
Since only ~1% even *could have* exploited the design error, I conclude 
that 'flexible modeling' has relatively low usage [although probably 
higher than 1%!].  I have no reason to believe this semester's class is 
unusual.
=====
In general, I have to work on unhamstringing the students I have to 
teach.  They usually are hamstrung by the "template" metaphor on the 
first day of class:
     "If I have not seen this exact problem type before, *PANIC*!"
This is classic Level-2 thinking.  In the above example, the Calc-only 
templates prevented using the much simpler trigonometric/Calc template, 
which they had never seen and would have needed dynamic-rebuild to notice.
Certainly, for calculational details, this is a good metaphor.  However, 
at College Algebra and upwards, the emphasis starts shifting to include 
how to *use* calculational details.  Metaknowledge actually starts 
becoming useful.
If the student fails to [for whatever reason] learn "flexible modeling, 
position shifting, and consciousness of purpose" EARLY, they are doomed to 
C or lower, no matter how much effort they put in.  All I can do is show 
them how it works; if they refuse it [the level-2 reject algorithm may go 
off even though they are supposedly there to learn what I'm doing--the 
dynamic rebuilding of solutions in real-time is at the border of 
level-2/level-3, AND they may focus on the templates that I'm 
accidentally creating], I really can't do much for them.
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/   Towards the conversion of data into information....
/
/   Kenneth Boyd
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