Primi Caterina, Donati Maria A, Izzo Viola A, Guardabassi Veronica, O'Connor Patrick A, Tomasetto Carlo, Morsanyi Kinga
NEUROFARBA, University of Florence, Florence, Italy.
Department of Developmental and Social Psychology, Sapienza University of Rome, Rome, Italy.
Front Psychol. 2020 May 21;11:1014. doi: 10.3389/fpsyg.2020.01014. eCollection 2020.
In the past decade, there has been increasing interest in understanding how and when math anxiety (MA) develops. The incidence and effects of MA in primary school children, and its relations with math achievement, have been investigated. Nevertheless, only a few studies have focused on the first years of primary school, highlighting that initial signs of MA may emerge as early as 6 years of age. Nevertheless, there are some issues with measuring MA in young children. One of these is that, although several scales have been recently developed for this age group, the psychometric properties of most of these instruments have not been adequately tested. There is also no agreement in the number and identity of the factors that underlie MA at this young age. Some scales also consist of several items, which make them impractical to use in multivariate studies, which aim at the simultaneous measurement of several constructs. Finally, most scales have been developed and validated in US populations, and it is unclear if they are appropriate to be used in other countries. In order to address these issues, the current studies aimed at developing a short, new instrument to assess MA in early elementary school students, the (the EES-AMAS). This scale is an adapted version of the (AMAS; Hopko et al., 2003), which is one of the most commonly used scales to measure MA and has been shown to be a valid and reliable measure across a number of countries and age groups. The psychometric properties of the new scale have been investigated by taking into account its dimensionality, reliability, and validity. Moreover, the gender invariance of the scale has been verified by showing the measurement equivalence of the scale when administered to male and female pupils. We have also demonstrated the equivalence of the scale across languages (Italian and English). Overall, the findings confirmed the validity and reliability of the new scale in assessing the early signs of math anxiety and in measuring differences between genders and educational contexts. We have also shown that MA was already related to math performance, and teacher's ratings of children's math ability at this young age. Additionally, we have found no gender differences in MA in our samples of 6- and 7-year-old children, an important finding, given the strong evidence for gender differences in MA in older age groups.
在过去十年中,人们对了解数学焦虑(MA)如何以及何时产生的兴趣与日俱增。小学儿童数学焦虑的发生率、影响及其与数学成绩的关系已得到研究。然而,只有少数研究关注小学的头几年,强调数学焦虑的最初迹象可能早在6岁时就会出现。然而,在测量幼儿的数学焦虑方面存在一些问题。其中之一是,尽管最近为这个年龄组开发了几种量表,但这些工具中的大多数的心理测量特性尚未得到充分测试。对于这个年幼年龄段数学焦虑背后的因素数量和特征也没有达成共识。一些量表还包含多个项目,这使得它们在旨在同时测量多个构念的多变量研究中不实用。最后,大多数量表是在美国人群中开发和验证的,尚不清楚它们是否适用于其他国家。为了解决这些问题,当前的研究旨在开发一种简短的新工具来评估小学低年级学生的数学焦虑,即小学早期数学焦虑量表(EES - AMAS)。该量表是数学焦虑量表(AMAS;霍普科等人,2003年)的改编版本,AMAS是测量数学焦虑最常用的量表之一,并且已被证明在多个国家和年龄组中是一种有效且可靠的测量工具。通过考虑其维度、信度和效度,对新量表的心理测量特性进行了研究。此外,通过展示该量表在施用于男女生时的测量等效性,验证了量表的性别不变性。我们还证明了该量表在不同语言(意大利语和英语)之间的等效性。总体而言,研究结果证实了新量表在评估数学焦虑早期迹象以及测量性别和教育背景差异方面的有效性和可靠性。我们还表明,数学焦虑在这个年幼年龄段就已经与数学成绩以及教师对儿童数学能力的评价相关。此外,在我们6岁和7岁儿童的样本中,我们没有发现数学焦虑存在性别差异,鉴于有强有力的证据表明年龄较大组在数学焦虑方面存在性别差异,这是一个重要发现。