“…Teleological and anthropomorphic reasoning closely relate to aspects of the reasoning processes framework used to characterize students’ reasoning in the organic chemistry education literature (the framework is sometimes referred to as the “modes of reasoning framework”, but is referred to as the “reasoning processes framework” to distinguish it from the other modes of reasoning framework). ,, The framework includes rules-based reasoning (the use of rules, often memorized, to explain phenomena; RBR), case-based reasoning (matching a problem to a similar, memorized case; CBR), and symbol-based reasoning (the manipulation of chemical symbols to reason about phenomena; SBR). ,, RBR, CBR, and SBR all reflect the surface-level reasoning characteristic of teleological and anthropomorphic reasoning. Of these three, reasoning based on memorized rules is frequently noted in the literature. ,− ,,,,− ,,− All three reasoning processes contrast with models-based reasoning (MBR), which is the use of a working mental model of a phenomenon that can be applied to dynamic situations (e.g., a mental model for determining the reaction pathway for substitution and elimination reactions). ,, MBR is similar to models and modeling frameworks, − which other researchers have used to interpret students’ mental models of reaction mechanisms and the related chemical concepts. ,,,,, Students’ more sophisticated mental models are akin to mechanistic and causal reasoning, which are common reasoning strategies described in the literature pertaining to students’ explanations of organic chemistry reaction mechanisms.…”