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Cheek, Kim A. – Research in Science Education, 2017
Ideas about temporal (and spatial) scale impact students' understanding across science disciplines. Learners have difficulty comprehending the long time periods associated with natural processes because they have no referent for the magnitudes involved. When people have a good "feel" for quantity, they estimate cardinal number magnitude…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Scientific Concepts, Science Education, Spatial Ability
Dackermann, Tanja; Fischer, Ursula; Nuerk, Hans-Christoph; Cress, Ulrike; Moeller, Korbinian – ZDM: The International Journal on Mathematics Education, 2017
"Embodied trainings" allowing children to move their whole body in space have recently been shown to foster the acquisition of basic numerical competencies (e.g. magnitude understanding, addition performance). Following a brief summary of recent embodied training studies, we integrate the different results into a unified model framework…
Descriptors: Children, Mathematics Instruction, Teaching Methods, Human Body
Chigeza, Philemon; Sorin, Reesa – Australian Journal of Teacher Education, 2016
Using both child-guided and adult-guided learning, Intentional Teaching in the early years can be a powerful tool for enhancing young children's numeracy skills. As Epstein (2009) notes, this can include providing "opportunities for children to represent things by drawing, building and moving" (p. 47). This paper investigates how…
Descriptors: Kindergarten, Children, Numeracy, Number Concepts
Imbo, Ineke; De Brauwer, Jolien; Fias, Wim; Gevers, Wim – Journal of Experimental Child Psychology, 2012
In a recent study, Gevers and colleagues (2010, "Journal of Experimental Psychology: General," Vol. 139, pp. 180-190) showed that the SNARC (spatial numerical association of response codes) effect in adults results not only from spatial coding of magnitude (e.g., mental number line hypothesis) but also from verbal coding. Because children are…
Descriptors: Evidence, Experimental Psychology, Number Concepts, Numeracy
de Hevia, Maria Dolores; Spelke, Elizabeth S. – Cognition, 2009
Mature representations of space and number are connected to one another in ways suggestive of a "mental number line", but this mapping could either be a cultural construction or a reflection of a more fundamental link between the domains of number and geometry. Using a manual bisection paradigm, we tested for number line representations in adults,…
Descriptors: Preschool Children, Number Concepts, Cognitive Processes, Mathematical Models
van Galen, Mirte S.; Reitsma, Pieter – Journal of Experimental Child Psychology, 2008
The SNARC (spatial-numerical association of response codes) effect refers to the finding that small numbers facilitate left responses, whereas larger numbers facilitate right responses. The development of this spatial association was studied in 7-, 8-, and 9-year-olds, as well as in adults, using a task where number magnitude was essential to…
Descriptors: Number Concepts, Numeracy, Children, Adults
Spelke, Elizabeth S.; Kinzler, Katherine D. – Developmental Science, 2007
Human cognition is founded, in part, on four systems for representing objects, actions, number, and space. It may be based, as well, on a fifth system for representing social partners. Each system has deep roots in human phylogeny and ontogeny, and it guides and shapes the mental lives of adults. Converging research on human infants, non-human…
Descriptors: Infants, Knowledge Level, Cognitive Development, Animals