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Does It Count? Pre-School Children’s Spontaneous Focusing on Numerosity and Their Development of Arithmetical Skills at School

Nadine Poltz, Sabine Quandte, Juliane Kohn, Karin Kucian, Anne Wyschkon, Michael von Aster, Günter Esser

2022Brain Sciences13 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Background: Children’s spontaneous focusing on numerosity (SFON) is related to numerical skills. This study aimed to examine (1) the developmental trajectory of SFON and (2) the interrelations between SFON and early numerical skills at pre-school as well as their influence on arithmetical skills at school. Method: Overall, 1868 German pre-school children were repeatedly assessed until second grade. Nonverbal intelligence, visual attention, visuospatial working memory, SFON and numerical skills were assessed at age five (M = 63 months, Time 1) and age six (M = 72 months, Time 2), and arithmetic was assessed at second grade (M = 95 months, Time 3). Results: SFON increased significantly during pre-school. Path analyses revealed interrelations between SFON and several numerical skills, except number knowledge. Magnitude estimation and basic calculation skills (Time 1 and Time 2), and to a small degree number knowledge (Time 2), contributed directly to arithmetic in second grade. The connection between SFON and arithmetic was fully mediated by magnitude estimation and calculation skills at pre-school. Conclusion: Our results indicate that SFON first and foremost influences deeper understanding of numerical concepts at pre-school and—in contrast to previous findings –affects only indirectly children’s arithmetical development at school.

Topics & Concepts

Numerosity adaptation effectArithmetic functionPsychologyMathematics educationDevelopmental psychologyComputer scienceMathematicsNeuroscienceCognitionMathematical analysisCognitive and developmental aspects of mathematical skillsMathematics Education and Teaching TechniquesEducation, Achievement, and Giftedness