What was yours like? The one I took didn't cover much on the actual writing of proofs. The professor accepted reasonable essays with high-school level notation. Instead, he gave us a toolbox for proving things: pairing terms in a series to find the sum, rewriting recursive equations, etc. It was mostly to show that clever tricks are how mathematicians prove new things. But that might've been because the professor was a guy who reveled in clever solutions.
It has been over a decade so I don't exactly remember - I looked it up and the class was Introduction to Mathematical Reasoning.
What I personally recall was following along in class while the professor walked through classic proofs emphasizing what each new notation meant as well as the difference between Direct, indirect, and induction proofs. Tests and assignments were essentially recreating proofs cherry picked to be similar to ones we walked through in class.
I realize that's kind of how all my higher level math classes were run. It's just that once the cherry picking becomes looser, intuition doesn't necessarily catch up :(.
What was yours like? The one I took didn't cover much on the actual writing of proofs. The professor accepted reasonable essays with high-school level notation. Instead, he gave us a toolbox for proving things: pairing terms in a series to find the sum, rewriting recursive equations, etc. It was mostly to show that clever tricks are how mathematicians prove new things. But that might've been because the professor was a guy who reveled in clever solutions.