Numerical magnitude understanding in kindergartners: A specific and sensitive predictor of later mathematical difficulties?

This study investigates whether different measures of numerical magnitude understanding in kindergarten uniquely predict mathematical achievement concurrently and 6 months later, and also examines the relative explanatory of each aspect of magnitude understanding. It also examines the utility of such tasks as sensitive and specific predictors of children at risk of mathematical learning difficulties. Kindergartners (N = 215, M age = 74 months) were administered a number-line estimation task, a nonsymbolic numerical discrimination task, and a nonsymbolic to word mapping task. Multiple measures of math achievement were administered concurrently and upon entering formal education (M age = 80 months). Path analysis revealed that all 3 aspects of magnitude understanding had similar explanatory power in predicting concurrent and prospective math achievement; the only exception was that nonsymbolic numerical discrimination was not a significant predictor of concurrent mathematical reasoning. Of the 3 measures of magnitude understanding, number-line estimation was found to be the most accurate predictor of persistent mathematical difficulties. Approximately half of the children misclassified as having mathematical difficulties showed inconsistent mathematical achievement across the multiple measures. The implications for screening for mathematical difficulties and for designing interventions are discussed. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2021 APA, all rights reserved)
Source: Journal of Educational Psychology - Category: Psychiatry & Psychology Source Type: research