(Press-News.org) Contact information: Andy Henion
henion@msu.edu
517-355-3294
Michigan State University
Kids grasp large numbers remarkably young
EAST LANSING, Mich. — Children as young as 3 understand multi-digit numbers more than previously believed and may be ready for more direct math instruction when they enter school, according to research led by a Michigan State University education scholar.
The study, online in the journal Child Development and funded by the U.S. Department of Education's Institute of Education Sciences, has implications for U.S. students who continue losing ground internationally in mathematics performance.
"Contrary to the view that young children do not understand place value and multi-digit numbers, we found that they actually know quite a lot about it," said Kelly Mix, MSU professor of educational psychology and co-author on the study. "They are more ready than we think when they enter kindergarten."
Understanding place value is the gateway to higher math skills such as addition with carrying, and there is a strong tie between place value skills in early elementary grades and problem-solving ability later on.
"In short, children who fail to master place value face chronic low achievement in mathematics," the study states.
In several experiments, Mix and Richard Prather and Linda Smith, both from Indiana University, tested children ages 3 to 7 on their ability to identify and compare two- and three-digit numbers.
In one task, for example, children were shown two quantities (such as 128 and 812) and asked to point out which was larger. "There was significant improvement in interpreting place value from age 3 to 7," Mix said, "but it was remarkable that even the youngest children showed at least some understanding of multi-digit numbers."
Mix said the surprising findings are likely due to the fact that children in today's society are bombarded with multi-digit numbers – from phone numbers to street addresses to price tags.
Interestingly, children may be developing partial knowledge of the place value system at least partly from language, she explained. Children often hear multi-digit numbers named while also seeing them in print, such as when parents comment on a calendar, ask their child to push the elevator buttons or look for a room number in an office building.
Previous research and teacher observations indicate children do not understand the symbols for place value – and, thus, multi-digit numbers – until well into elementary school. Typically, young students receive specialized conceptual instruction on place value, such as with place value blocks.
The researchers trained children on place value blocks and found no improvement. However, training with written symbols alone did yield significant benefits. Because of this, and the study's finding that students already recognize multi-digit numbers to some degree, Mix said more direct instruction with place value and multi-digit numbers should be considered in the early grades.
INFORMATION:
Kids grasp large numbers remarkably young
2013-12-18
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
Pollen influences optical properties of the atmosphere
2013-12-18
Pollen influences optical properties of the atmosphere
Laser measurements show: pollen has considerably influence on air quality
This news release is available in German. Leipzig, Germany. Pollen reflects more sunlight than previously known, ...
Describing biodiversity on tight budgets: 3 new Andean lizards discovered
2013-12-18
Describing biodiversity on tight budgets: 3 new Andean lizards discovered
Three beautiful new lizards from the Andes of Peru have been delimited and discovered using different lines of evidences by Peruvian and American biologists from San Marcos and Brigham Young universities ...
Packaging insulin into a pill-friendly form for diabetes treatment
2013-12-18
Packaging insulin into a pill-friendly form for diabetes treatment
Since insulin's crucial discovery nearly a century ago, countless diabetes patients have had to inject themselves with the life-saving medicine. Now scientists are reporting a new development ...
Tropical forests mitigate extreme weather events
2013-12-18
Tropical forests mitigate extreme weather events
Tropical forests reduce peak runoff during storms and release stored water during droughts, according to researchers working at the Smithsonian Tropical Research Institute in Panama. Their results lend ...
Vemurafenib: Result unchanged despite new data
2013-12-18
Vemurafenib: Result unchanged despite new data
Results from later analysis dates uncertain because patients switched between treatments
Pursuant to the Act on the Reform of the Market for Medicinal Products (AMNOG), the German ...
Toward lowering titanium's cost and environmental footprint for lightweight products
2013-12-18
Toward lowering titanium's cost and environmental footprint for lightweight products
A novel method for extracting titanium, a metal highly valued for its light weight, high strength, corrosion resistance and biocompatibility, could lower its cost and make ...
44 percent of adults worry e-cigarettes will encourage kids to start smoking tobacco
2013-12-18
44 percent of adults worry e-cigarettes will encourage kids to start smoking tobacco
Almost half of parents concerned their child will try e-cigarettes; support high for prohibiting sale to kids, says U-M National Poll on Children's Health
ANN ARBOR, Mich. ...
Suggested ban on trans fat begs the question: Are substitutes any healthier?
2013-12-18
Suggested ban on trans fat begs the question: Are substitutes any healthier?
Health advocates cheered last month's U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) proposal to ban partially hydrogenated oils — which contain trans fats that increase the risk of heart ...
Toward lowering titanium's cost and environment
2013-12-18
Toward lowering titanium's cost and environment
In the quest to shrink motors so they can maneuver in tiny spaces like inside and between human cells, scientists have taken inspiration from millions of years of plant evolution and incorporated, for the first ...
Leading health care executives optimistic about health care reform, Penn survey shows
2013-12-18
Leading health care executives optimistic about health care reform, Penn survey shows
Views differ sharply from general public, politicians, and commentators
Philadelphia - Nearly two-thirds (65 percent) of the nation's leading health ...