Clark Lindsey, Shelley-Tremblay John, Cwikla Julie
Department of Psychology, University of South Alabama, Mobile, AL 36688, USA.
Creativity & Innovation in STEM, University of Southern Mississippi, Hattiesburg, MS 39406, USA.
Behav Sci (Basel). 2021 Feb 15;11(2):26. doi: 10.3390/bs11020026.
We investigated preschool-aged children's understanding of early fractional tasks and how that performance correlates with fine motor skills and use of gestures while counting. Participants were 33 preschoolers aged 4 to 5 in two Southeastern public elementary schools. Children were tested individually in an interview-like setting. Mathematics tasks were presented in a paper and pencil format and the Grooved Pegboard test assessed fine motor skills. Finally, utilization of gestures was evaluated by taking a behavioral rating of the child's hand morphology, accuracy of gestures, and synchrony of gestures and spoken word while performing a counting task. Results indicate that performance on fractional reasoning tasks significantly predicts both fine motor ability and accuracy of gestures.
我们研究了学龄前儿童对早期分数任务的理解,以及这种表现如何与精细运动技能和计数时的手势使用相关联。参与者是来自两所东南部公立小学的33名4至5岁的学龄前儿童。孩子们在类似面试的环境中接受单独测试。数学任务以纸笔形式呈现,凹槽钉板测试评估精细运动技能。最后,通过对孩子在执行计数任务时的手部形态、手势准确性以及手势与口语的同步性进行行为评分,来评估手势的运用情况。结果表明,分数推理任务的表现显著预测了精细运动能力和手势准确性。