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Navi, K.; Molahosseini, A. S.; Esmaeildoust, M. – IEEE Transactions on Education, 2011
The residue number system (RNS) has been an important research field in computer arithmetic for many decades, mainly because of its carry-free nature, which can provide high-performance computing architectures with superior delay specifications. Recently, research on RNS has found new directions that have resulted in the introduction of efficient…
Descriptors: Number Systems, Teaching Methods, Computer System Design, Computer Science Education
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Burroughs, Elizabeth A.; Yopp, David – Investigations in Mathematics Learning, 2010
This article investigates prospective elementary teachers' conceptions of the repeating decimal 0.999... Five students from a first-semester undergraduate course "Mathematics for Elementary School Teachers" were interviewed to ascertain their conceptions about the mathematical statement 0.999... = 1. All of the students indicated they do not…
Descriptors: Mathematics Education, Elementary School Teachers, Misconceptions, Preservice Teacher Education
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Cohen, Dale J. – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition, 2010
Participants' reaction times (RTs) in numerical judgment tasks in which one must determine which of 2 numbers is greater generally follow a monotonically decreasing function of the numerical distance between the two presented numbers. Here, I present 3 experiments in which the relative influences of numerical distance and physical similarity are…
Descriptors: Evidence, Reaction Time, Information Retrieval, Task Analysis
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Gilmore, Camilla K.; McCarthy, Shannon E.; Spelke, Elizabeth S. – Cognition, 2010
Children take years to learn symbolic arithmetic. Nevertheless, non-human animals, human adults with no formal education, and human infants represent approximate number in arrays of objects and sequences of events, and they use these capacities to perform approximate addition and subtraction. Do children harness these abilities when they begin to…
Descriptors: Mathematics Achievement, Symbols (Mathematics), Kindergarten, Arithmetic
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Vukovic, Rose K.; Lesaux, Nonie K.; Siegel, Linda S. – Learning and Individual Differences, 2010
Although many children with reading difficulty (RD) are reported to struggle with mathematics, little research has empirically investigated whether this is the case for different types of RD. This study examined the mathematics skills of third graders with one of two types of RD: dyslexia (n = 18) or specific reading comprehension difficulty (n =…
Descriptors: Reading Comprehension, Reading Difficulties, Dyslexia, Mathematics Skills
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Holland, Lucy; Low, Jason – British Journal of Developmental Psychology, 2010
Three experiments used dual-task suppression methodology to study the use of inner speech and visuospatial resources for mediating central executive performance by children with autism (CWA) and group-matched typically developing (TD) controls. Expt 1 revealed that CWA did not recruit inner speech to facilitate arithmetic task-switching…
Descriptors: Inner Speech (Subvocal), Autism, Short Term Memory, Visual Perception
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Farrington-Flint, Lee; Canobi, Katherine H.; Wood, Clare; Faulkner, Dorothy – British Journal of Developmental Psychology, 2010
Children's reasoning was examined within two educational contexts (word reading and addition) so as to understand the factors that contribute to relational reasoning in the two domains. Sixty-seven 5- to 7-year-olds were given a series of related words to read or single-digit addition items to solve (interspersed with unrelated items). The…
Descriptors: Multivariate Analysis, Thinking Skills, Problem Solving, Reading Ability
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Stigler, James W.; Givvin, Karen B.; Thompson, Belinda J. – MathAMATYC Educator, 2010
The nation is facing a crisis in its community colleges: more and more students are attending community colleges, but most of them are not prepared for college-level work. The problem may be most dire in mathematics. By most accounts, the majority of students entering community colleges are placed (based on placement test performance) into…
Descriptors: College Mathematics, Student Placement, Community Colleges, Algebra
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Gamo, Sylvie; Sander, Emmanuel; Richard, Jean-Francois – Learning and Instruction, 2010
Transfer of strategies between problems sharing the same formal structure is facilitated by a semantic recoding that makes evident the structural similarities between the problems. Two experiments were carried out among 4th and 5th grade pupils, with an experimental group trained to compare strategies in order to reinterpret an arithmetic word…
Descriptors: Experimental Groups, Control Groups, Semantics, Word Problems (Mathematics)
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Gebhardt, Markus; Krammer, Mathias; Schwab, Susanne; Rossmann, Peter; Klicpera, Barbara Gasteiger; Klatten, Susanne – International Journal of Special Education, 2013
Every school system has to deal with children with Learning Disabilities (LD). However, the concepts of LD, the assessment procedures, the diagnostic criteria as well as their interpretation vary widely from country to country. What they usually seem to have in common is that general cognitive abilities, as measured by standardized IQ tests, are…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Student Evaluation, Standardized Tests, Learning Disabilities
Purpura, David J.; Baroody, Arthur J.; Eiland, Michael D.; Reid, Erin E. – Society for Research on Educational Effectiveness, 2012
In a meta-analysis of 164 studies, Alfieri, Brooks, Aldrich, and Tenenbaum (2010) found that assisted discovery learning was more effective than explicit instruction or unassisted discovery learning and that explicit instruction resulted in more favorable outcomes than unassisted discovery learning. In other words, "unassisted discovery does…
Descriptors: Discovery Learning, Reading Instruction, Feedback (Response), Beginning Reading
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Brousseau, Guy; Brousseau, Nadine; Warfield, Virginia – Journal of Mathematical Behavior, 2009
In the late seventies, Guy Brousseau set himself the goal of verifying experimentally a theory he had been building up for a number of years. The theory, consistent with what was later named (nonradical) constructivism, was that children, in suitable carefully arranged circumstances, can build their own knowledge of mathematics. The experiment,…
Descriptors: Constructivism (Learning), Arithmetic, Problem Solving, Mathematical Concepts
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Stock, Pieter; Desoete, Annemie; Roeyers, Herbert – Learning and Individual Differences, 2009
Counting abilities have been described as determinative precursors for a good development of later arithmetic abilities. Mastery of the stable order, the one-one-correspondence and the cardinality principles can be seen as essential features for the development of counting abilities. Mastery of the counting principles in kindergarten was assessed…
Descriptors: Grade 1, Achievement Tests, Kindergarten, Arithmetic
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Jordan, Julie-Ann; Mulhern, Gerry; Wylie, Judith – Journal of Experimental Child Psychology, 2009
The arithmetical performance of typically achieving 5- to 7-year-olds (N=29) was measured at four 6-month intervals. The same seven tasks were used at each time point: exact calculation, story problems, approximate arithmetic, place value, calculation principles, forced retrieval, and written problems. Although group analysis showed mostly linear…
Descriptors: Intervals, Individual Differences, Number Concepts, Computation
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Devlin, John F. – Physics Teacher, 2009
The Lorentz velocity addition formula for one-dimensional motion presents a number of problems for beginning students of special relativity. In this paper we suggest a simple rewrite of the formula that is easier for students to memorize and manipulate, and furthermore is more intuitive in understanding the correction necessary when adding…
Descriptors: Motion, Physics, Science Instruction, Scientific Principles
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