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Preschoolers doing arithmetic: The concepts are willing but the working memory is weak.
137
Citations
2
References
2000
Year
Academic CompetenciesKindergarten EducationMathematics CognitionEducationPreschool DevelopmentCognitionPsycholinguisticsEarly Childhood EducationSocial SciencesMathematics EducationMathematical CognitionCognitive DevelopmentLanguage AcquisitionWorking MemoryNumerical CompetenceCognitive ScienceLearning SciencesEarly Childhood DevelopmentChildcare StudiesNumeracyInfant CognitionChild DevelopmentEarly EducationEarly Childhood LiteracyYoung ChildrenPreschool EducationEarly Mathematical Development
The study of early mathematical development provides important insights into young children's emerging academic competencies and, potentially, a basis for adapting instructional methods. We presented nonverbal forms of two- and three-term arithmetic problems to 4-year-olds to determine (a) the extent to which certain information-processing demands make some problems more difficult than others and (b) whether preschoolers use arithmetic concepts spontaneously when solving novel problems. Children's accuracy on simple arithmetic problems (a + b and a - b) was strongly related (r2 = .88) to representational set size, the maximum number of units that need to be held in working memory to solve a given problem. Some children also showed spontaneous use of procedures based on the arithmetic principle of inversion when solving problems of the form a + b - b. These results highlight the importance of identifying information-processing and conceptual characteristics in the early development of mathematical cognition.
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