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Céline Poletti; Marie Krenger; Marie Létang; Brune Hennequin; Catherine Thevenot – Child Development, 2025
Our study on 328 five- to six-year-old kindergarteners (mainly White European living in France, 152 girls) shows that children who do not count on their fingers and undergo finger counting training exhibit drastic improvement in their addition skills from pre-test to post-test (i.e., accuracy from 37.3% to 77.1%) compared to a passive control…
Descriptors: Kindergarten, Young Children, Foreign Countries, Mathematics Skills
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Marie-Caroline Croset; Sébastien Caudron; Laure Mondelain; Ahmed Zaher; Hamid Chaachoua; Karine Mazens – European Journal of Psychology of Education, 2024
Previous research has shown the importance of conducting early interventions in mathematics in disadvantaged children. Solving arithmetical word problems is a field in which children particularly fail. In this study, preschoolers from disadvantaged French public schools (n = 101; M[subscript age] = 5-6) were taught strategies for using fingers to…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Kindergarten, Preschool Children, Mathematics Education
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Stéphanie Chouteau; Benoît Lemaire; Catherine Thevenot; Jasinta Dewi; Karine Mazens – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition, 2024
It is commonly accepted that repeatedly using mental procedures results in a transition to memory retrieval, but the determinant of this process is still unclear. In a 3-week experiment, we compared two different learning situations involving basic additions, one based on counting and the other based on arithmetic fact memorization. Two groups of…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, French, Native Speakers, College Students