Abstract
In this article, I discuss children's design of mathematical representations on paper, asking how material displays are constructed and transformed in activity. I show that (a) the design of displays during problem solving shapes one's mathematical activity and sense making in crucial ways, and (b) knowledge of mathematical representations is not simply recalled and applied to problem solving but also emerges (whether constructed anew or not) out of one's interactions with the social and material settings of activity. A detailed characterization of student-designed tables of values to solve problems about linear functions is also presented.

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