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Teaching Cartesian Product Problem Solving to Students With Autism Spectrum Disorder Using a Conceptual Model-Based Approach

Melody García‐Moya, Irene Polo-Blanco, Rocío Blanco, Juncal Goñi-Cervera

2022Focus on Autism and Other Developmental Disabilities11 citationsDOI

Abstract

Students with autism spectrum disorder frequently face challenges when learning mathematical concepts. For example, they may have difficulties solving mathematical word problems, in particular Cartesian product problems. This research is a case study with a multiple probe design in which the participants were three Spanish students diagnosed with autism spectrum disorder. A conceptual model-based problem-solving approach adapted to the characteristics of the participants was used to teach them how to solve Cartesian product word problems introduced sequentially in the instruction (first multiplication, then division, and finally both operations). The results show a functional relationship between the intervention and the students’ performance. The three participants generalized their learning to two-operation Cartesian product problems (an addition and a multiplication). Moreover, two of them retained what they learned 6 weeks after completing the instruction. The implications for teaching this and other mathematical content to students with autism are discussed.

Topics & Concepts

Autism spectrum disorderMultiplication (music)Cartesian productAutismPsychologyProduct (mathematics)Mathematics educationCartesian coordinate systemIntervention (counseling)Division (mathematics)Cognitive psychologyComputer scienceArithmeticAlgebra over a fieldDevelopmental psychologyMathematicsPure mathematicsDiscrete mathematicsGeometryPsychiatryCombinatoricsAutism Spectrum Disorder ResearchBehavioral and Psychological StudiesCognitive and developmental aspects of mathematical skills
Teaching Cartesian Product Problem Solving to Students With Autism Spectrum Disorder Using a Conceptual Model-Based Approach | Litcius