Passolunghi, Maria Chiara, and Silvia
Lanfranchi. "Domain‐specific and domain‐general precursors of
mathematical achievement: A longitudinal study from kindergarten to first
grade." British Journal of Educational Psychology82.1 (2012): 42-63.
A wide scale
research looking into the links between different cognitive abilities assessed
at kindergarten and math achievement at the end of first grade. Seventy children participated in this study.
At the beginning of the last year of
kindergarten (children aged 5.2 years) the children were administered a battery of cognitive tests (Vocabulary
and Block Design from the Wechsler , and tests assessing working memory, verbal
and visuo-spatial short-term memory, phonological ability, verbal counting
ability, and processing speed).
At the end of the
last year of kindergarten (children aged 5.8 years) numerical competence was assessed (by tests
assessing concepts of comparison, classification, one-to-one correspondence,
seriation, the use of number words, counting and general understanding of
numbers).
At the end of the
first year of primary school (children aged 6.6 years) mathematical achievement was assessed (by tests assessing
spatio-temporal analysis, seriation, and classification (i.e., the ability to
order spatio-temporal sequence and to order objects from smallest to largest), acquisition
of the concept of natural numbers (i.e., to be able to position numbers on the
‘number line’), understanding of basic arithmetic operations (+, −), and the capacity to locate objects in
space).
The paper adds some background on the
assessed cognitive abilities:
Phonological awareness and mathematics - one
study found a significant relationship between phonological awareness (rhyme
detection and initial consonant detection) assessed at 4 and 5 years of age and
mathematical competencies as judged by teachers at the beginning of first
grade. Another study found that
phonological awareness scores (rhyme tasks) assessed at 5 years of age
predicted reading as well as arithmetic abilities 1 year later. Yet another
study reported that phonological processing (measured by rapid digit naming,
first sound matching, and last sound matching) was a unique determinant of fact
fluency but did not predict other aspects of math performance (e.g., story
problems). There are also studies showing
that phonological awareness does not predict mathematics ability and is only a
predictor of reading ability.
Counting ability - A verbal counting task (e.g., repeating as
fast and accurately as possible a sequence of numbers) is a mixed measure that
requires numerical knowledge of number sequence as well as speed of
articulation and, therefore, the activity of phonological loop. Counting is linked to phonological abilities,
since children learn to count at 2 years of age without employing number words
to describe the quantities.
Processing
speed - A number of studies showed that
children with poor mathematical abilities have poor performance in processing
speed. Processing speed was found to
be the best predictor of arithmetic competence among 7-year olds. One study found that fourth grade children with arithmetic
learning disability suffered from a deficit in the speed of activating both
numerical and non-numerical information from long-term memory. Speed of
retrieval of information from long-term memory
is a correlate of arithmetic skills in second to fifth graders. In a group of third grade children,
processing speed was a significant predictor of arithmetic ability when
assessed by visual matching and retrieval fluency tasks.
How
were the cognitive abilities assessed in this research?
Processing speed was assessed with the WJ III visual matching
test. The child was asked to locate and
circle two identical symbols that appear in a row of six symbols. In speed pattern comparison task 60 pairs of patterns were presented, and the
child had to decide as quickly as possible whether the two
patterns of each pair were identical.
Verbal
Memory span was assessed with a
forward digit and word recall tasks. Visuo-spatial memory span was assessed with a task
in which the child was shown a path
taken by a frog on a 3 × 3 or 4 × 4 chessboard. The child had to reproduce the experimenter’s moves. Another task was the Corsi block task that
requires children to watch the experimenter pointing to a series of blocks that
are arranged randomly on a board, and then to point to the blocks in the same
order.
Working
memory was assessed with a list of two to five
words of which the child had to remember the first word and to concurrently
perform a dual task. Digit backwards recall
task was also administered.
For the word fluency task the child was asked to generate as
many words as possible in 1 min beginning with a particular letter. For the semantic fluency task the
child was given a minute to name as many items as
possible from particular semantic categories: animals, objects, and
occupations.
Phonological awareness was assessed by word and pseudo-word repetition, recognition and
repetition of the first or last sound of the word or non-word said aloud by the
experimenter in words and pseudowords, phonological
analysis and synthesis of words.
For the verbal counting task, the child
was asked to count as fast as possible from 1 to 10 three times.
Counting speed was
assessed with a task requiring the child to count objects as
fast as possible.
Results:
Numerical competence as measures at the end of
kindergarten was significantly correlated s 0.45 with processing speed, 0.42
with working memory , 0.42 with phonological skills and 0.46 with verbal
counting and counting speed.
Mathematical achievement as measured at the end of
first grade was significantly correlated 0.35 with vocabulary, 0.34 with
processing speed, 0.32 with verbal counting and counting speed, and 0.42 with
numerical competence as measured at the end of kindergarten.
Path
analysis model showed that the strongest predictors of numerical competence at
the end of kindergarten are processing speed and working memory. The strongest predictors of mathematical
achievement at the end of first grade
are numerical competence at the end of kindergarten, processing speed and
vocabulary.
Processing speed may facilitate the execution of several
tasks, such as counting speed, as well as recall of partial results of problem
solutions, preventing the decay of the information that must be processed. Phonological
awareness and counting skills were highly correlated with processing speed in
this research. This might mean that the
faster a child can process stimuli, the faster he/she can access phonological information about numbers and
counting.
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