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The roles of different executive functioning skills in young children’s mental computation and applied mathematical problem‐solving

Sum Kwing Cheung, Winnie Wai Lan Chan

2021British Journal of Developmental Psychology23 citationsDOI

Abstract

This study investigated the relationships of four executive functioning skills (including verbal working memory, spatial working memory, inhibitory control, and cognitive flexibility) with young children's mental computation and applied mathematical problem-solving. Two hundred and twenty-five Chinese kindergarteners were tested with a battery of general cognitive, executive functioning and mathematics skills. Results showed that when children's age, gender, non-verbal intelligence, and listening comprehension skills were controlled, verbal working memory and cognitive flexibility were significant correlates of mental computation, whereas verbal working memory, spatial working memory, and cognitive flexibility were significant correlates of applied mathematical problem-solving. Inhibitory control was not significantly associated with the two domains of mathematics under investigation. The findings highlight the differential roles of different executive functioning skills in early mathematical skills and offer practical implication for helping young children in learning complex mathematical skills.

Topics & Concepts

Working memoryPsychologyExecutive functionsCognitive flexibilityCognitionCognitive psychologyFlexibility (engineering)Cognitive skillDevelopmental psychologySpatial abilityComprehensionActive listeningComputer scienceCommunicationMathematicsStatisticsNeuroscienceProgramming languageCognitive and developmental aspects of mathematical skillsChild and Animal Learning DevelopmentNeuroscience, Education and Cognitive Function
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