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Giannis Karagiannakis; Marie-Pascale Noël; Anna Baccaglini-Frank; Cristiano Termine – Discover Education, 2024
By the end of primary school, children are expected to acquire a range of mathematical skills that progressively develop. This study aimed to gain insight into how a large number of numerical and geometrical measures are grouped and whether the structures shift or remain invariant along child's development based on the data obtained from a sample…
Descriptors: Mathematics Skills, Classification, Elementary School Students, Geometry
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Kiliç, Zeynep; Yorulmaz, Alper – Southeast Asia Early Childhood, 2023
The aim of the study is to determine the movement skills, geometry and spatial perceptions of five-year-old children. The study group consisted of 222 children, 110 girls and 112 boys, who received preschool education in the spring semester of the 2021-2022 academic year in Istanbul, Türkiye. The correlational survey model, one of the quantitative…
Descriptors: Preschool Children, Psychomotor Skills, Geometry, Spatial Ability
Thom, Jennifer S.; McGarvey, Lynn M.; Lineham, Nicole D. – Mathematics Education Research Group of Australasia, 2021
Spatial reasoning is seen as increasingly important in STEM fields. Within mathematics, geometry is a potential site to study and support young children's spatial reasoning. In this paper we revisit Piaget and his colleagues' theoretical perspective on children's development of geometry concepts and take note of projective geometry in that theory.…
Descriptors: Geometry, Perspective Taking, Mathematics Instruction, Spatial Ability
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Lew, Adina R.; Gibbons, Bryony; Murphy, Caroline; Bremner, J. Gavin – Developmental Science, 2010
Proponents of the geometric module hypothesis argue that following disorientation, many species reorient by use of macro-environment geometry. It is suggested that attention to the surface layout geometry of natural terrain features may have been selected for over evolutionary time due to the enduring and unambiguous location information it…
Descriptors: Geometric Concepts, Geometry, Spatial Ability, Young Children
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Ortmann, Margaret R.; Schutte, Anne R. – Journal of Experimental Child Psychology, 2010
Early in development, there is a transition in spatial working memory (SWM). When remembering a location in a homogeneous space (e.g., in a sandbox), young children are biased toward the midline symmetry axis of the space. Over development, a transition occurs that leads to older children being biased away from midline. The dynamic field theory…
Descriptors: Young Children, Short Term Memory, Child Development, Spatial Ability
Clements, Douglas H. – 1998
Although geometry and spatial reasoning are important as a way to interpret and reflect on the physical environment and also form the foundation for learning mathematics and other subjects, many early childhood and primary school teachers spend little time instructing their students in these areas. This paper examines how young children learn…
Descriptors: Age Differences, Child Development, Cognitive Development, Concept Formation