Students move from arithmetic examples to algebraic proof, understanding why a finite number of examples never constitutes a proof and how algebra allows universal conclusions.
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Display: proof, conjecture, generalise, let, therefore, hence, integer, consecutive. Model mathematical language: 'Since ___, it follows that ___.' Avoid 'obviously' in proofs.
Provide sentence starters: 'Let the [integer] be ___.' Scaffold with partially completed proofs. Focus on even/odd proofs before consecutive number proofs.
Do students define their variables clearly? Do they simplify to a form that proves the claim? Do they conclude with a clear statement linking the algebra to the original claim?
All proofs written on mini whiteboards or plain paper. No printed resources needed.
Students may use specific numbers (let n = 3) rather than general expressions. Reinforce: 'n must represent ANY integer, not one specific value.'
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