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Developmental trajectories of children's spatial skills: Influencing variables and associations with later mathematical thinking

Wenke Möhring, Andrew Ribner, Robin Segerer, Melissa E. Libertus, Tobias Kahl, Larissa Maria Troesch, Alexander Grob

2021Learning and Instruction36 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Few studies have examined the long-term relations between children's early spatial skills and their later mathematical abilities. In the current study, we investigated children's developmental trajectories of spatial skills across four waves from age 3–7 years and their association with children's later mathematical understanding. We assessed children's development in a large, heterogeneous sample of children (N = 586) from diverse cultural backgrounds and mostly low-income homes. Spatial and mathematical skills were measured using standardized assessments. Children's starting points and rate of growth in spatial skills were investigated using latent growth curve models. We explored the influence of various covariates on spatial skill development and found that socioeconomic status, language skills, and sex, but not migration background predicted children's spatial development. Furthermore, our findings showed that children's initial spatial skills––but not their rate of growth––predicted later mathematical understanding, indicating that early spatial reasoning may play a crucial role for learning mathematics.

Topics & Concepts

Spatial abilityPsychologyDevelopmental psychologyLatent growth modelingSocioeconomic statusChild developmentAssociation (psychology)DemographyCognitionPopulationSociologyPsychotherapistNeuroscienceSpatial Cognition and NavigationCognitive and developmental aspects of mathematical skillsChild and Animal Learning Development