PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Preschoolers' counting abilities relate to future math performance, researcher says

Counting, in addition to reciting, should be emphasized in early childhood education to establish foundations for future academic success

Preschoolers' counting abilities relate to future math performance, researcher says
2012-11-09
(Press-News.org) COLUMBIA, Mo. – Along with reciting the days of the week and the alphabet, adults often practice reciting numbers with young children. Now, new research from the University of Missouri suggests reciting numbers is not enough to prepare children for math success in elementary school. The research indicates that counting, which requires assigning numerical values to objects in chronological order, is more important for helping preschoolers acquire math skills.

"Reciting means saying the numbers from memory in chronological order, whereas counting involves understanding that each item in the set is counted once and that the last number stated is the amount for the entire set," said Louis Manfra, an assistant professor in MU's Department of Human Development and Family Studies. "When children are just reciting, they're basically repeating what seems like a memorized sentence. When they're counting, they're performing a more cognitive activity in which they're associating a one-to-one correspondence with the object and the number to represent a quantity."

Manfra analyzed data from more than 3,000 children from low-income households in order to determine if the children's reciting and counting abilities in preschool affected their first-grade math scores. He found that students who could recite and count to 20 in preschool had the highest math scores in first grade; however, less than 10 percent of the children in the study could count and recite to 20.

"Counting gives children stronger foundations when they start school," Manfra said. "The skills children have when they start kindergarten affect their trajectories through early elementary school; therefore, it's important that children start with as many skills as possible."

Previous research has shown that, in low-income families, parents often think children's educations are the responsibility of teachers, while teachers expect parents to teach some essential skills at home, Manfra said.

"These low-income children aren't learning math skills anywhere because parents think the children are learning them at school, and teachers think they're learning them at home," Manfra said. "This is a problem because it gives parents and teachers the idea that it's not their responsibility to educate the children, when it's everyone's responsibility. This is problematic because, when the children enter kindergarten and are at lower math levels, they don't have the foundational skills needed to set them on paths for future success."

Parents and teachers should integrate counting into all aspects of children's daily activities so they can master the skill, Manfra said.

"You can learn anything anywhere, and this is very true for counting," Manfra said. "When adults read books with children, they can count the ducks on the page. They might count the leaves that fall to the ground outside or the number of carrots at lunchtime."



INFORMATION:

The Department of Human Development and Family Studies is part of the MU College of Human Environmental Sciences. The study, "Associations between Counting Ability in Preschool and Mathematic Performance in First Grade among a Sample of Ethnically Diverse, Low-Income Children," will be published in an upcoming issue of the Journal of Research in Childhood Education.


[Attachments] See images for this press release:
Preschoolers' counting abilities relate to future math performance, researcher says

ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Ovarian cancer patients have lower mortality rates when treated at high-volume hospitals

2012-11-09
New York, NY (Nov. 8, 2012) – A study by researchers at the Herbert Irving Comprehensive Cancer Center (HICCC) at NewYork-Presbyterian/Columbia University Medical Center, recently e-published ahead of print by the Journal of Clinical Oncology, suggests that women who have surgery for ovarian cancer at high-volume hospitals have superior outcomes than similar patients at low-volume hospitals. The improved survival rate is not dependent on a lower rate of complications following surgery, but on the treatment of the complications. In fact, patients with a complication after ...

Study shows young adults with addiction benefit from active 12 step group participation

2012-11-09
CENTER CITY, Minn. (November 8, 2012) – Young adults undergoing addiction treatment benefit from regular participation in Twelve Step-based self-help groups after discharge, according to a naturalistic study published electronically and in the journal Drug and Alcohol Dependence. The study was conducted collaboratively by the Center for Addiction Medicine at Massachusetts General Hospital and Harvard Medical School and the Butler Center for Research at Hazelden. "Very little is known about the effects of Twelve Step attendance and involvement on outcomes for young adults. ...

Medical devices powered by the ear itself

2012-11-09
Deep in the inner ear of mammals is a natural battery — a chamber filled with ions that produces an electrical potential to drive neural signals. In today's issue of the journal Nature Biotechnology, a team of researchers from MIT, the Massachusetts Eye and Ear Infirmary (MEEI) and the Harvard-MIT Division of Health Sciences and Technology (HST) demonstrate for the first time that this battery could power implantable electronic devices without impairing hearing. The devices could monitor biological activity in the ears of people with hearing or balance impairments, or ...

A B C -- 1 2 3, but what is good for me?

2012-11-09
Philadelphia, PA, November 8, 2012 – The National Health and Nutrition Examination Surveys revealed that over 21% of children 2 to 5 years old were considered overweight or obese. Child care settings can serve as a platform to teach children about nutrition in our fight against childhood obesity, as nearly 50% of children in the United States under age 5 are enrolled in child care. In a new study released in the November/December 2012 issue of the Journal of Nutrition Education and Behavior, training child care providers about their role in children's healthful eating ...

Antioxidants may ease PAD blood pressure increase

2012-11-09
HERSHEY, Pa. -- Low antioxidant levels contribute to increased blood pressure during exercise for people with peripheral arterial disease, according to researchers at Penn State Hershey Heart and Vascular Institute. Peripheral arterial disease, or PAD, affects an estimated 10 million Americans and increases the chance of death from a cardiovascular event. Reduced blood flow causes pain in the legs and increases blood pressure in people who have PAD. However, the causes of the disease are unknown. "Past studies have shown that having low antioxidant levels and increased ...

Comet collisions every 6 seconds explain 17-year-old stellar mystery

2012-11-09
Every six seconds, for millions of years, comets have been colliding with one another near a star in the constellation Cetus called 49 CETI, which is visible to the naked eye. Over the past three decades, astronomers have discovered hundreds of dusty disks around stars, but only two — 49 CETI is one — have been found that also have large amounts of gas orbiting them. Young stars, about a million years old, have a disk of both dust and gas orbiting them, but the gas tends to dissipate within a few million years and almost always within about 10 million years. Yet ...

Is housework a health hazard? Sheet-Fitting palsy described by wake forest baptist physicians

2012-11-09
WINSTON-SALEM, N.C. – Nov. 8, 2012 – What do a tight, fitted bed sheet and a blood clot in the wrist have in common? Both are associated with a condition called sheet fitting palsy. True to its name, the palsy is reported in those who spend a long period of time repeatedly trying to pull a fitted bed sheet over the corner of a mattress. But it has also been reported in basketball players and in those who do push-ups as exercise. The injury is caused by the continuous flexing movement of the wrist and results in a tiny stroke in the artery to the hand. The resulting ...

More bang for the biofuel buck

More bang for the biofuel buck
2012-11-09
A fermentation technique once used to make cordite, the explosive propellant that replaced gunpowder in bullets and artillery shells, may find an important new use in the production of advanced biofuels. With the addition of a metal catalyst, researchers at the U.S. Department of Energy (DOE)'s Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory (Berkeley Lab) have shown that the production of acetone, butanol and ethanol from lignocellulosic biomass could be selectively upgraded to the high volume production of gasoline, diesel or jet fuel. Using the bacterium Clostridium acetobutylicum, ...

Diabetes study: 'Mindful eating' equals traditional education in lowering weight and blood sugar

2012-11-09
COLUMBUS, Ohio – Eating mindfully, or consuming food in response to physical cues of hunger and fullness, is just as effective as adhering to nutrition-based guidelines in reducing weight and blood sugar levels in adults with Type 2 diabetes, a new study suggests. In a comparison study of the effectiveness of the two types of behavioral interventions, participants lost about the same amount of weight – an average of between 3 1/2 and 6 pounds – and lowered their long-term blood sugar levels significantly after three months. One treatment group followed an established ...

Taking on the challenges of replication in psychological science

2012-11-09
Psychological science has come of age. But the rights of a mature discipline carry with them responsibilities, among them the responsibility to maximize confidence in our findings through good data practices and replication. The November issue of Perspectives on Psychological Science, a journal of the Association for Psychological Science (APS), reflects the discipline's ongoing commitment to examine methodological issues that affect all areas of science — such as failures to replicate previous findings and problems of bias and error — with the goal of strengthening our ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Magnetic catalysts enhance tumor treatment via electronic density regulation

 Quantum dot discovery for LEDs brings brighter, more eco-friendly displays

Phosphorus doping stabilizes high-energy polymeric nitrogen at ambient pressure

Maternal cannabis use triples risk of disruptive behaviour in children

Balancing Nutrition: Micronutrient study could help prevent childhood obesity in Pacific region

Lightening the load of augmented reality glasses

Sneaky clocks: uncovering Einstein’s relativity in an interacting atomic playground

The chances of anything coming from Mars

Scientists unlock clues to new treatments for muscular dystrophy

Anti-obesity drugs benefit kidney transplant recipients with type 2 diabetes

Cases of Parkinson’s disease set to reach 25 million worldwide by 2050

Throat microbiome holds clues to older Australians’ health

Diabetes drug could help cancer patients make better recovery  

Seismic study of Singapore could guide urban construction and renewable energy development

Tufts scientists develop open-source software for modeling soft materials

Repurposed ALS drug becomes imaging probe to help diagnose neurodegeneration

AI can open up beds in the ICU

Are robotic hernia repairs still in the “learning curve” phase?

New STI impacts 1 in 3 women: Landmark study reveals men are the missing link

Feeling is believing: Bionic hand “knows” what it’s touching, grasps like a human

Damon Runyon Cancer Research Foundation awards $4.4 million to top young scientists

Over-the-counter pain relievers linked to improved recovery from concussion

Stressed out? It may increase the risk of stroke

Nanoscale tweaks help alloy withstand high-speed impacts

AI-generated voices which sound like you are perceived as more trustworthy and likeable, with implications for deep-fakes and manipulation

The cacao tree species (Theobroma cacao L.), from which we get chocolate, is likely about 7.5 million years old, with chloroplast genomes indicating that the current known diversity diversified during

After sexual misconduct accusations, scholars’ work is cited less

Menopause symptoms associated with future memory and neuropsychiatric problems

Findings may advance understanding of infertility in mothers

Engineered cartilage from nasal septum cells helps treat complex knee injuries

[Press-News.org] Preschoolers' counting abilities relate to future math performance, researcher says
Counting, in addition to reciting, should be emphasized in early childhood education to establish foundations for future academic success