“…As stated by Cooper and Stowe, “...there is little to be gained by simply cataloging misconceptions without paying heed to the mechanisms of their emergence, their organization, and their character.” From a theoretical perspective, the resources framework provides the language and the lens to make the transition from focusing on what students do not know to considering how students can use what they do know productively. Recent work situated using the resources perspective has yielded rich data across topics in chemistry ,,,− and more broadly in physics and mathematics. − In the sections that follow, the resources perspective is used to frame the remainder of the discussion, in which each of the analytic frameworks can be viewed as tools to characterize mathematical resources (e.g., symbolic forms) or the interaction between resources or groups of resources (e.g., blended processing). To illustrate this idea, a resource graph is provided below in Figure , which illustrates the connections among resources; , for examples of how resource graphs have been used as a data visualization tool, see recent work by the authors. , As shown in Figure , symbolic forms, graphical forms, and covariational reasoning can be framed as examples of mathematical resources, and when these resources are combined with resources related to chemistry, conceptual integration (blended processing and engaging in mathematical narratives) occurs between the chemistry and mathematics domains.…”