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Construction of the cardinality principle through counting: critique and conjecture

Martin A. Simon, Daniela Della Volpe, Arundhati Velamur

2021Mathematical Thinking and Learning11 citationsDOI

Abstract

Development of the cardinality principle, an understanding that the last number-word recited in counting a collection of items specifies the number of items in that collection, is a critical milestone in developing a concept of number. Researchers in early number development have endeavored to theorize its development. Here we critique two widely respected hypotheses that explain cardinality-principle development as building on young learners’ ability to subitize small numbers. These hypotheses consider subitizing to be the basis of cardinality-principle development. We argue that there is a qualitative and significant difference between subitizing and the cardinality principle and that the explanation provided are insufficient to account for a change of this magnitude. We then propose a conjecture intended to better explain this change. The conjecture describes counting as the medium for a series of reflective abstractions leading to the cardinality principle.

Topics & Concepts

Cardinality (data modeling)ConjectureMathematicsDevelopment (topology)Cardinal number (linguistics)MilestoneMathematics educationDiscrete mathematicsComputer scienceLinguisticsGeographyData miningArchaeologyPhilosophyMathematical analysisCognitive and developmental aspects of mathematical skillsMathematics Education and Teaching TechniquesReading and Literacy Development
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