The Educational Proof Assistant Waterproof in an Introductory Proof Course: Proof Construction and Learning Processes
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Abstract
We study the use of an educational proof assistant in an introductory proof course through a quasi-experiment in a varied setting: multiple teachers, students with different study programs, and a mixed Dutch-English language environment.
First-year university students are known to struggle with writing proofs.
Waterproof is a proof assistant that is designed to support the transfer of skills to paper proofs by working with controlled natural language.
We focus on the students' ability to construct valid mathematical proofs, and on their learning process.
We study this through in-class observation, surveys, and analysis of student performance and proof structure.
We present evidence that effects of using an educational proof assistant carry over to the pen-and-paper context,even when the assistant is English and the proof is given in Dutch.
We also present evidence that suggests students in the Mathematics-Computer Science program achieve higher grades when using Waterproof.
Our most important conclusion is that an educational proof assistant can help students be more explicit in their proofs.
As students self-selected into using Waterproof rather than being randomly assigned, these results are suggestive rather than causal.