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Clark, Colin Travis – ProQuest LLC, 2012
Young children must develop basic concepts of numeracy--one being that numbers have magnitudes that increase linearly--before they are able to succeed in mathematics. Children from low-income families have been found to be at a greater disadvantage in the development of numeracy, but this disadvantage can be overcome through the use of a simple…
Descriptors: Numeracy, Number Concepts, Young Children, Games
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Imbo, Ineke; De Brauwer, Jolien; Fias, Wim; Gevers, Wim – Journal of Experimental Child Psychology, 2012
In a recent study, Gevers and colleagues (2010, "Journal of Experimental Psychology: General," Vol. 139, pp. 180-190) showed that the SNARC (spatial numerical association of response codes) effect in adults results not only from spatial coding of magnitude (e.g., mental number line hypothesis) but also from verbal coding. Because children are…
Descriptors: Evidence, Experimental Psychology, Number Concepts, Numeracy
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Bolyard, Johnna; Moyer-Packenham, Patricia – Journal of Computers in Mathematics and Science Teaching, 2012
This study investigated how the use of virtual manipulatives in integer instruction impacts student achievement for integer addition and subtraction. Of particular interest was the influence of using virtual manipulatives on students' ability to create and translate among representations for integer computation. The research employed a…
Descriptors: Mathematics Achievement, Numbers, Mathematics Instruction, Mathematics Skills
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Tillema, Erik S. – Mathematics Teaching in the Middle School, 2012
Mr. Carter is about to start a two-day lesson on subtraction of integers with his sixth-grade prealgebra students. He plans to use contextualized problems that will allow his students to develop an interpretation of subtraction that involves the idea of "difference." This article outlines one way to teach students develop number line…
Descriptors: Subtraction, Algebra, Mathematics Instruction, Grade 6
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Bock, Kathryn; Carreiras, Manuel; Meseguer, Enrique – Journal of Memory and Language, 2012
Grammatical agreement makes different demands on speakers of different languages. Being widespread in the languages of the world, the features of agreement systems offer valuable tests of how language affects deep-seated domains of human cognition and categorization. Number agreement is one such domain, with intriguing evidence that typological…
Descriptors: Spanish, Semantics, Morphology (Languages), Language Processing
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Clarke, Doug M.; Roche, Anne – Educational Studies in Mathematics, 2009
As part of individual interviews incorporating whole number and rational number tasks, 323 grade 6 children in Victoria, Australia were asked to nominate the larger of two fractions for eight pairs, giving reasons for their choice. All tasks were expected to be undertaken mentally. The relative difficulty of the pairs was found to be close to that…
Descriptors: Numbers, Foreign Countries, Grade 6, Teaching Methods
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Shutler, Paul M. E.; Fong, Ng Swee – International Journal of Mathematical Education in Science and Technology, 2010
Modern Hindu-Arabic numeration is the end result of a long period of evolution, and is clearly superior to any system that has gone before, but is it optimal? We compare it to a hypothetical base 5 system, which we dub Predator arithmetic, and judge which of the two systems is superior from a mathematics education point of view. We find that…
Descriptors: Elementary School Mathematics, Mathematics Instruction, Computation, Arithmetic
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Man, Yiu-Kwong – Teaching Mathematics and Its Applications: An International Journal of the IMA, 2010
In this article, we discuss how to use a diagrammatic approach to solve the classic sailors and the coconuts problem. It provides us an insight on how to tackle this type of problem in a novel and intuitive way. This problem-solving approach will be found useful to mathematics teachers or lecturers involved in teaching elementary number theory,…
Descriptors: Problem Solving, Number Concepts, Mathematics Teachers, Elementary School Mathematics
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Morgan, Frank – College Mathematics Journal, 2010
Fermat's Last Theorem says that for integers n greater than 2, there are no solutions to x[superscript n] + y[superscript n] = z[superscript n] among positive integers. What about rational exponents? Irrational n? Negative n? See what an undergraduate senior seminar discovered.
Descriptors: Mathematics Instruction, Seminars, Undergraduate Study, College Mathematics
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Berge, Analia – International Journal of Mathematical Education in Science and Technology, 2010
This article presents an exploratory study that gives account of some students' perceptions of the completeness property of the set of real numbers. Students taking three undergraduate correlative courses in Calculus and Analysis answered a written questionnaire; their scripts are analysed trying to understand how operational is the notion of…
Descriptors: College Mathematics, Undergraduate Students, Mathematical Concepts, Questionnaires
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Thanheiser, Eva – Educational Studies in Mathematics, 2010
This study was designed to investigate preservice elementary school teachers' (PSTs') responses to written standard place-value-operation tasks (addition and subtraction). Previous research established that PSTs can often perform but not explain algorithms and provided a four-category framework for PSTs' conceptions, two correct and two incorrect.…
Descriptors: Preservice Teachers, Elementary School Teachers, Subtraction, Mathematics Instruction
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Picozzi, Marta; de Hevia, Maria Dolores; Girelli, Luisa; Cassia, Viola Macchi – Journal of Experimental Child Psychology, 2010
Previous evidence has shown that 11-month-olds represent ordinal relations between purely numerical values, whereas younger infants require a confluence of numerical and non-numerical cues. In this study, we show that when multiple featural cues (i.e., color and shape) are provided, 7-month-olds detect reversals in the ordinal direction of…
Descriptors: Cues, Infants, Number Concepts, Visual Stimuli
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Dobbs, David E. – International Journal of Mathematical Education in Science and Technology, 2010
If f is a continuous positive-valued function defined on the closed interval from a to x and if k[subscript 0] is greater than 0, then lim[subscript k[right arrow]0[superscript +] [integral][superscript x] [subscript a] f (t)[superscript k-k[subscript 0]] dt= [integral][superscript x] [subscript a] f (t)[superscript -k[subscript 0] dt. This…
Descriptors: Calculus, Numbers, Intervals, Introductory Courses
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Fischer, Martin H.; Mills, Richard A.; Shaki, Samuel – Brain and Cognition, 2010
Most theoreticians believe that reading habits explain why Western adults associate small numbers with left space and large numbers with right space (the SNARC effect). We challenge this belief by documenting, in both English and Hebrew, that SNARC changes during reading: small and large numbers in our texts appeared near the left or right ends of…
Descriptors: Semitic Languages, Reading Habits, Numbers, Organizations (Groups)
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Ranzini, Mariagrazia; Dehaene, Stanislas; Piazza, Manuela; Hubbard, Edward M. – Neuropsychologia, 2009
Studies of endogenous (cue-directed) attention have traditionally assumed that such shifts must be volitional. However, recent behavioural experiments have shown that participants make automatic endogenous shifts of attention when presented with symbolic cues that are systematically associated with particular spatial directions, such as arrows and…
Descriptors: Attention, Cues, Spatial Ability, Numbers
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