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Yang Dong; Chow Bonnie Wing-Yin; Jianhong Mo; Xuecong Miao; Hao-Yuan Zheng; Hang Dong; Mingmin Zhang – Reading and Writing: An Interdisciplinary Journal, 2024
Reading comprehension and arithmetic skills are essential abilities for children, particularly at the early career. Examine the link between language proficiency and numeral information process amongst primary school children. This study examines numeral comprehension in 600 Chinese primary second graders with different levels of decoding and…
Descriptors: Language Proficiency, Reading Comprehension, Arithmetic, Number Concepts
Andrea Marquardt Donovan – ProQuest LLC, 2024
Learning mathematics involves abstract thinking and the use of symbols. To be successful in a mathematics classroom, students must master what symbols mean and how they work. Much prior work has focused on the nature of the external representations used in mathematics instruction, including manipulatives and symbolic representations. In this work,…
Descriptors: Symbols (Mathematics), Thinking Skills, Learning Processes, Elementary School Mathematics
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Isabella Starling-Alves; Mariuche Gomides; Denise O. Ribeiro; Vitor G. Haase; Edward M. Hubbard – Journal of Numerical Cognition, 2024
Learning fractions is essential for academic and daily life success. A critical first step in acquiring fractions is learning to transcode them (e.g., writing ½ when hearing "one half"). However, little is known about how students master fraction transcoding. We addressed this gap by assessing fraction writing in two groups of Brazilian…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Fractions, Adult Education, Elementary School Mathematics
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Szkudlarek, Emily; Brannon, Elizabeth M. – Child Development, 2021
Children struggle with exact, symbolic ratio reasoning, but prior research demonstrates children show surprising intuition when making approximate, nonsymbolic ratio judgments. In the current experiment, eighty-five 6- to 8-year-old children made approximate ratio judgments with dot arrays and numerals. Children were adept at approximate ratio…
Descriptors: Grade 1, Grade 2, Elementary School Students, Logical Thinking
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Xu, Chang; LeFevre, Jo-Anne – Child Development, 2021
How do children develop associations among number symbols? For Grade 1 children (n = 66, M = 78 months), sequence knowledge (i.e., identify missing numbers) and number comparison (i.e., choose larger number) predicted addition, both concurrently and indirectly at the end of Grade 1. Number ordering (i.e., touch numbers in order) did not predict…
Descriptors: Children, Numeracy, Symbols (Mathematics), Elementary School Students
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Devlin, Brianna L.; Hornburg, Caroline Byrd; McNeil, Nicole M. – Developmental Psychology, 2023
A longitudinal study was conducted to identify unique sources of individual differences in later understanding of the equal sign as a relational symbol of equivalence (i.e., formal understanding of mathematical equivalence). The sample included 141 children from a mid-sized city in the Midwestern United States (M[subscript age] = 6 years, 2 months…
Descriptors: Kindergarten, Grade 2, Elementary School Students, Predictor Variables
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Stephens, Ana; Sung, Yewon; Strachota, Susanne; Torres, Ranza Veltri; Morton, Karisma; Gardiner, Angela Murphy; Blanton, Maria; Knuth, Eric; Stroud, Rena – Mathematical Thinking and Learning: An International Journal, 2022
This research focuses on ways in which balance scales mediate students' relational understandings of the equal sign. Participants included 21 Kindergarten-Grade 2 students who took part in an early algebra classroom intervention focused in part on developing a relational understanding of the equal sign through the use of balance scales. Students…
Descriptors: Equations (Mathematics), Kindergarten, Elementary School Students, Symbols (Mathematics)
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Matthews, Percival G.; Fuchs, Lynn S. – Child Development, 2020
Algebraic competence is a major determinant of college access and career prospects, and equal sign knowledge is taken to be foundational to algebra knowledge. However, few studies have documented a causal effect of early equal sign knowledge on later algebra skill. This study assessed whether second-grade students' equal sign knowledge…
Descriptors: Symbols (Mathematics), Grade 2, Grade 4, Elementary School Students
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Maffia, Andrea; Mariotti, Maria Alessandra – Educational Studies in Mathematics, 2020
The use of artifacts to introduce the distributive law of multiplication over addition in primary school is a diffused approach: it is possible to find pre-constructed learning trajectories in instructional materials. However, it is still unclear how the teacher might support his/her students in transitioning from concrete to symbolic…
Descriptors: Symbols (Mathematics), Mathematics Instruction, Elementary School Mathematics, Arithmetic
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Chow, Jason C.; Wehby, Joseph H. – Elementary School Journal, 2019
The purposes of this study were (a) to test the efficacy of whole-class equal-sign instruction, (b) to contrast the effects of symbolic and nonsymbolic instructional representation, (c) to determine whether visual representation compensated for language deficits, and (d) to evaluate maintenance of intervention. We randomly assigned 195 children…
Descriptors: Grade 2, Symbols (Mathematics), Elementary School Mathematics, Mathematics Instruction
Farfan, Guillermo; Schoen, Robert C. – Grantee Submission, 2021
Many studies conducted in the last decades report that very few elementary-grades students understand the meaning of = in mathematics, and that upper-elementary students do not understand it any better than the lower-elementary students do. Using data from thousands of Florida elementary students, we show that students in Florida perform ten to…
Descriptors: Elementary School Students, Mathematics Instruction, Symbols (Mathematics), Instructional Program Divisions
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Eichhorn, Melinda S.; Perry, Lindsey E.; Brombacher, Aarnout – International Journal of Research in Education and Science, 2018
Many students around the world are exposed to a rote teaching style in mathematics that emphasizes memorization of procedures. Students are frequently presented with standard types of equations in their textbooks, in which the equal sign is immediately preceding the answer (a + b = c). This exposure can lead to many misconceptions, such as…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Equations (Mathematics), Symbols (Mathematics), Mathematics Tests
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McNeil, Nicole M.; Hornburg, Caroline Byrd; Brletic-Shipley, Heather; Matthews, Julia M. – Journal of Educational Psychology, 2019
Elementary school children (ages 7-11) struggle to understand mathematical equivalence, a foundational prealgebraic concept. Some manipulations to the learning environment, including well-structured nontraditional arithmetic practice alone, have been shown to improve children's understanding; however, improvements have been modest. The goal of…
Descriptors: Children, Intervention, Arithmetic, Elementary School Students
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Driver, Melissa K.; Powell, Sarah R. – Learning Disabilities Research & Practice, 2015
Students often experience difficulty with attaching meaning to mathematics symbols. Many students react to symbols, such as the equal sign, as a command to "do something" or "write an answer" without reflecting upon the proper relational meaning of the equal sign. One method for assessing equal-sign understanding is through…
Descriptors: Symbols (Mathematics), Mathematics Instruction, Mathematical Concepts, Grade 2
Price, Gavin R.; Eric, Wilkey D. – Grantee Submission, 2017
Recent studies suggest that the relation between nonsymbolic magnitude processing skills and math competence is mediated by symbolic number processing. However, less is known about whether mapping between nonsymbolic and symbolic magnitude representations also mediates that relation, and whether the mediating role of symbolic number processing is…
Descriptors: Mathematics Skills, Symbols (Mathematics), Cognitive Processes, Executive Function
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