Fish Lesenia R, Hildebrand Lindsey, Chernyak Nadia, Cordes Sara
Department of Psychology, Emory University, Atlanta, Georgia, USA.
Department of Psychology and Neuroscience, Boston College, Chestnut Hill, Massachusetts, USA.
Child Dev. 2023 Sep-Oct;94(5):1239-1258. doi: 10.1111/cdev.13987. Epub 2023 Aug 15.
Games are frequently used to promote math learning, yet the competitive and collaborative contexts introduced by games may exacerbate gender differences. In this study, 1st and 2nd grade children in the U.S. (ages 5-8; N = 274; 70% White, 15% Asian, 2% Black, 1% Native American, 14% mixed or other race; 17% Hispanic) played either a competitive, collaborative, or solo game to learn about a challenging novel math concept: proportion. Overall, both social contexts boosted perseverance and task attitudes. However, analyses revealed the competitive condition yielded gender differences in attention to proportion in the presence of competing cues, with older boys underperforming in the competition condition. Potential explanations for these findings, as well as implications for classroom math learning, are discussed.
游戏经常被用于促进数学学习,然而游戏引入的竞争和协作环境可能会加剧性别差异。在本研究中,美国一、二年级的儿童(年龄5 - 8岁;N = 274;70%为白人,15%为亚洲人,2%为黑人,1%为美洲原住民,14%为混血或其他种族;17%为西班牙裔)玩了一款竞争性、协作性或单人游戏,以学习一个具有挑战性的新颖数学概念:比例。总体而言,两种社交环境都提高了毅力和任务态度。然而,分析显示,在存在竞争线索的情况下,竞争条件在对比例的关注上产生了性别差异,年龄较大的男孩在竞争条件下表现较差。本文讨论了这些发现的潜在解释以及对课堂数学学习的启示。