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Lemaire, Patrick; Lecacheur, Mireille – Cognitive Development, 2011
Third, fifth, and seventh graders selected the best strategy (rounding up or rounding down) for estimating answers to two-digit addition problems. Executive function measures were collected for each individual. Data showed that (a) children's skill at both strategy selection and execution improved with age and (b) increased efficiency in executive…
Descriptors: Grade 3, Grade 5, Grade 7, Age Differences
Peer reviewedWakeley, Ann; Rivera, Susan; Langer, Jonas – Child Development, 2000
Used Wynn's (1992) procedure in 3 experiments to test 5-month-olds' looking-time reactions to correct and incorrect results of simple addition and subtraction transformations. Found non-systematic evidence of either imprecise or precise adding and subtracting in young infants. Results suggest that infants' reactions to displays of adding and…
Descriptors: Addition, Cognitive Development, Infant Behavior, Infants
Peer reviewedWakeley, Ann; Rivera, Susan; Langer, Jonas – Child Development, 2000
Asserts that findings on whether young infants look longer at incorrect addition and subtraction have been inconsistent or negative. Hypothesizes that imprecise ordinal calculating with very small numbers of objects develops in late infancy and that precise calculating develops in early childhood. (Author/KB)
Descriptors: Addition, Cognitive Development, Infant Behavior, Infants
Peer reviewedThornton, Carol A. – Arithmetic Teacher, 1989
Discusses developmentally appropriate activities for teaching counting skills for kindergarten and early first-grade programs. Describes four activities: (1) counting on; (2) counting back; (3) auditory patterning; and (4) visual patterning based on the 10-frame. (YP)
Descriptors: Addition, Cognitive Development, Computation, Elementary School Mathematics
Peer reviewedNelson, Marvin N.; Clark, H. Clifford – School Science and Mathematics, 1991
Provides the instructions to build a homemade calculator that can be used as a reinforcement device to assist primary students in memorizing their addition facts. (MDH)
Descriptors: Addition, Cognitive Development, Computation, Elementary Education
Peer reviewedLittle, Todd D.; Widaman, Keith F. – Journal of Experimental Child Psychology, 1995
Validated models of mental addition processing by testing children and adults in a production task paradigm. Examined individual-difference relations between strategy choice parameters and criterion-related measures of ability. Found that individual differences in the apparently calculative processes that underlie numerical facility are highly…
Descriptors: Addition, Adolescents, Age Differences, Cognitive Ability
Peer reviewedHoward, Arthur C. – Mathematics Teacher, 1991
Discussed is why students have the tendency to apply an "add the numerators and add the denominators" approach to adding fractions. Suggested is providing examples exemplifying this intuitive approach from ratio, concentration, and distance problems to demonstrate under what conditions it is applicable in contrast to the addition algorithm. (MDH)
Descriptors: Addition, Cognitive Development, Concept Formation, Elementary School Mathematics
Peer reviewedLee, Kil S. – School Science and Mathematics, 1991
Traditional methods of teaching addition include algorithms that involve right-to-left procedures. This article describes efficient procedures for left-to-right addition and subtraction involving computation and computational estimation that reflect children's natural behaviors observed during activities with unifix cubes. (MDH)
Descriptors: Addition, Algorithms, Cognitive Development, Cognitive Processes
Usnick, Virginia E. – Focus on Learning Problems in Mathematics, 1992
This study compared the effectiveness of teaching multidigit addition of whole numbers without regrouping prior to teaching it with regrouping to teaching multidigit addition with and without regrouping simultaneously. Pretest/posttest-delayed posttest results of second grade students (n=151) from seven randomly assigned classrooms indicated no…
Descriptors: Addition, Cognitive Development, Cognitive Processes, Computation
Bisanz, Jeffrey – 1989
The cutoff method was used on longitudinal data in more than one content domain in a study attempting to determine whether the effects of schooling are general or limited. Conservation of number, an informally acquired skill, and mental addition, a formally acquired skill, were evaluated among older kindergarten children, younger 1st-grade…
Descriptors: Addition, Age Differences, Cognitive Development, Conservation (Concept)
Peer reviewedKamii, Constance; Lewis, Barbara Ann – Arithmetic Teacher, 1991
Presents a study of 87 second graders to demonstrate that achievement tests in primary mathematics emphasize pupil's lower-order thinking by comparing answers to interview questions from constructivist and traditionally instructed groups. Results indicated that constructivist instructed students demonstrated superior higher-order thinking on tasks…
Descriptors: Achievement Tests, Addition, Cognitive Development, Cognitive Measurement

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