Litcius/Paper detail

The emergence of children’s natural number concepts: Current theoretical challenges

Francesco Sella, Emily Slusser, Darko Odic, Attila Krajcsi

2021Child Development Perspectives27 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Abstract Learning the meaning of number words is a lengthy and error-prone process. In this review, we highlight outstanding issues related to current accounts of children’s acquisition of symbolic number knowledge. We maintain that, despite the ability to identify and label small numerical quantities, children do not understand initially that number words refer only to sets of discrete countable items, not to other nonnumerical dimensions. We question the presence of a sudden change in children’s understanding of cardinality, and we report the limits of the give-a-number task. We also highlight that children are still learning the directional property of the counting list, even after acquiring the cardinality principle. Finally, we discuss the role that the Approximate Number System may have in supporting the acquisition of symbolic numbers. We call for improvements in methodological tools and refinement in theoretical understanding of how children learn natural numbers.

Topics & Concepts

Cardinality (data modeling)Countable setProperty (philosophy)Task (project management)Meaning (existential)Natural (archaeology)Process (computing)Natural numberPsychologyCognitive psychologyComputer scienceTheoretical computer scienceMathematicsEpistemologyDiscrete mathematicsData miningOperating systemEconomicsArchaeologyManagementPhilosophyPsychotherapistHistoryCognitive and developmental aspects of mathematical skillsMathematics Education and Teaching TechniquesEducation Methods and Practices
The emergence of children’s natural number concepts: Current theoretical challenges | Litcius