Systems that Explain Themselves" appears a provocative wording, in particular in the context of mathematics education -it is as provocative as the idea of building educational software upon technology from computer theorem proving. In spite of recent success stories like the proofs of the Four Colour Theorem or the Kepler Conjecture, mechanised proof is still considered somewhat esoteric by mainstream mathematics.This paper describes the process of prototyping in the ISAC project from a technical perspective. This perspective depends on two moving targets: On the one side the rapidly increasing power and coverage of computer theorem provers and their user interfaces, and on the other side potential users: What can students and teachers request from educational systems based on technology and concepts from computer theorem proving, now and then?By the way of describing the process of prototyping the first comprehensive survey on the state of the ISAC prototype is given as a side effect, made precise by pointers to the code and by citation of all contributing theses. 1 In this paper TP abbreviates the academic discipline as well as the products this discipline develops, proof assistants and automated provers frequently included in the former.2 https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dines_Bjoerner 3 https://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Peter_Lucas_(Informatiker) 4 https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bruno_Buchberger 5
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