posted on 2019-08-01, 10:27authored byC Gilmore, S Clayton, L Cragg, C McKeaveney, V Simms, SJ Johnson
A large body of research has identified cognitive skills associated with overall mathematics
achievement, focusing primarily on identifying associates of procedural skills. Conceptual
understanding, however, has received less attention, despite its importance for the development of mathematics proficiency. Consequently, we know little about the quantitative and
domain-general skills associated with conceptual understanding. Here we investigated
8–10-year-old children’s conceptual understanding of arithmetic, as well as a wide range of
basic quantitative skills, numerical representations and domain-general skills. We found
that conceptual understanding was most strongly associated with performance on a number
line task. This relationship was not explained by the use of particular strategies on the number line task, and may instead reflect children’s knowledge of the structure of the number
system. Understanding the skills involved in conceptual learning is important to support
efforts by educators to improve children’s conceptual understanding of mathematics.
Funding
This study was funded by a project grant (SP4575) from Action Medical Research (AMR, www.action.org.uk/), UK. CG is supported by a UK Royal Society Dorothy Hodgkin Fellowship (https://royalsociety.org/).
History
Citation
PLoS ONE 13(9): e0201724.
Author affiliation
/Organisation/COLLEGE OF LIFE SCIENCES/School of Medicine/Department of Health Sciences