Chu Felicia W, vanMarle Kristy, Geary David C
Department of Psychological Sciences, University of Missouri Columbia, MO, USA.
Department of Psychological Sciences, University of MissouriColumbia, MO, USA; Interdisciplinary Neuroscience Program, University of MissouriColumbia, MO, USA.
Front Psychol. 2016 May 25;7:775. doi: 10.3389/fpsyg.2016.00775. eCollection 2016.
One hundred children (44 boys) participated in a 3-year longitudinal study of the development of basic quantitative competencies and the relation between these competencies and later mathematics and reading achievement. The children's preliteracy knowledge, intelligence, executive functions, and parental educational background were also assessed. The quantitative tasks assessed a broad range of symbolic and nonsymbolic knowledge and were administered four times across 2 years of preschool. Mathematics achievement was assessed at the end of each of 2 years of preschool, and mathematics and word reading achievement were assessed at the end of kindergarten. Our goals were to determine how domain-general abilities contribute to growth in children's quantitative knowledge and to determine how domain-general and domain-specific abilities contribute to children's preschool mathematics achievement and kindergarten mathematics and reading achievement. We first identified four core quantitative competencies (e.g., knowledge of the cardinal value of number words) that predict later mathematics achievement. The domain-general abilities were then used to predict growth in these competencies across 2 years of preschool, and the combination of domain-general abilities, preliteracy skills, and core quantitative competencies were used to predict mathematics achievement across preschool and mathematics and word reading achievement at the end of kindergarten. Both intelligence and executive functions predicted growth in the four quantitative competencies, especially across the first year of preschool. A combination of domain-general and domain-specific competencies predicted preschoolers' mathematics achievement, with a trend for domain-specific skills to be more strongly related to achievement at the beginning of preschool than at the end of preschool. Preschool preliteracy skills, sensitivity to the relative quantities of collections of objects, and cardinal knowledge predicted reading and mathematics achievement at the end of kindergarten. Preliteracy skills were more strongly related to word reading, whereas sensitivity to relative quantity was more strongly related to mathematics achievement. The overall results indicate that a combination of domain-general and domain-specific abilities contribute to development of children's early mathematics and reading achievement.
一百名儿童(44名男孩)参与了一项为期3年的纵向研究,该研究旨在探讨基本数量能力的发展情况,以及这些能力与后期数学和阅读成绩之间的关系。同时,研究人员还评估了儿童的学前识字知识、智力、执行功能以及父母的教育背景。数量任务评估了广泛的符号和非符号知识,在两年的学前教育期间进行了四次测试。在学前教育的两年结束时分别评估数学成绩,在幼儿园结束时评估数学和单词阅读成绩。我们的目标是确定一般领域能力如何促进儿童数量知识的增长,以及一般领域能力和特定领域能力如何促进儿童的学前数学成绩以及幼儿园阶段的数学和阅读成绩。我们首先确定了四种核心数量能力(例如,数字词的基数价值知识),这些能力可以预测后期的数学成绩。然后,使用一般领域能力来预测学前两年这些能力的增长情况,并将一般领域能力、学前识字技能和核心数量能力相结合,来预测学前阶段的数学成绩以及幼儿园结束时的数学和单词阅读成绩。智力和执行功能都预测了四种数量能力的增长,尤其是在学前教育的第一年。一般领域能力和特定领域能力的结合预测了学龄前儿童的数学成绩,并且有一个趋势是,特定领域技能在学前教育开始时比结束时与成绩的相关性更强。学前识字技能、对物体集合相对数量的敏感度以及基数知识预测了幼儿园结束时的阅读和数学成绩。学前识字技能与单词阅读的相关性更强,而对相对数量的敏感度与数学成绩的相关性更强。总体结果表明,一般领域能力和特定领域能力的结合有助于儿童早期数学和阅读成绩的发展。