“…Instead of viewing it relationally as a symbol indicating that two quantities share a common value and are, thus, interchangeable within a mathematical context, they tend to view it operationally as a signal to add up all the numbers and put the total in 'the blank' (Alibali, 1999;Baroody & Ginsburg, 1983;Behr, Erlwanger, & Nichols, 1980;Falkner, Levi, & Carpenter, 1999;Jacobs, Franke, Carpenter, Levi, & Battey, 2007;Li, Ding, Capraro, & Capraro, 2008;Kieran, 1981;Loehr, Fyfe, & Rittle-Johnson, 2014;McNeil, 2005McNeil, , 2008Perry, 1991;Powell & Fuchs, 2010;Renwick, 1932;Weaver, 1973). This is worrisome because this operational way of thinking does not generalize beyond simple arithmetic, and a relational understanding of the equal sign is critical for success in algebra (Falkner et al, 1999;Jacobs et al, 2007;Kieran, 1992;National Research Council, 2001;Steinberg, Sleeman, & Ktorza, 1990).…”