Printer Friendly
The Free Library
14,709,671 articles and books
Member login
User name  
Password 
 
Join us Forgot password?

Wired for Math.


Quick. What's 845 + 289? Sorry, time's up.

Few people can add numbers in their heads that quickly. If someone showed you a set of 845 dots next to a set of 289 dots, however, you'd you'd  

1. Contraction of you had.

2. Contraction of you would.


you'd you had or you would
you'd have ~would
 probably be able to tell right away which set has more dots. You could probably also tell that 845 dots is more than 100 dots plus 189 dots, even if you saw all three sets of dots separately.

By giving tests like these to kids and adults, scientists are discovering that we develop a sense for large numbers long before we learn how to count or talk. Our brains seem to come equipped with systems for estimating amounts and doing arithmetic, says Elizabeth Elizabeth, sister of King Louis XVI of France
Elizabeth, 1764–94, sister of King Louis XVI of France, known as Madame Elizabeth. Deeply loyal to her brother, she remained in France during the French Revolution, suffered imprisonment, and was
 Spelke. She's she's  

1. Contraction of she is: She's going away for the weekend.

2. Contraction of she has: She's been to the symphony twice this month.
 a psychologist psy·chol·o·gist
n.
A person trained and educated to perform psychological research, testing, and therapy.


psychologist 
 at Harvard University Harvard University, mainly at Cambridge, Mass., including Harvard College, the oldest American college. Harvard College


Harvard College, originally for men, was founded in 1636 with a grant from the General Court of the Massachusetts Bay Colony.
 in Cambridge Cambridge, city, Canada
Cambridge (kām`brĭj), city (1991 pop. 92,772), S Ont., Canada, on the Grand River, NW of Hamilton. It was formed in 1973 with the amalgamation of Galt, Hespeler, and Preston, all founded in the early 19th cent.
, Mass.

Spelke's work adds to a growing body of research showing that young children and even animals have some inborn inborn /in·born/ (in´born?)
1. genetically determined, and present at birth.

2. congenital.


in·born
adj.
1. Possessed by an organism at birth.

2.
 sense of number, long before they ever receive a formal math lesson (see "It's a Math World for Animals"). Spelke's goal is to answer one basic question. "What abilities do children have when they start school that support the learning of mathematics?" she asks.

The answer, Spelke says, could help teachers find better ways to teach math by tapping into skills that their students bring with them.

"The premise of my work is that all learning in school builds on systems we already have," Spelke says. "My goal is to figure out what those systems are, how they work, and how they come together for mathematical thinking."

Flash math

To add, subtract A relational DBMS operation that generates a third file from all the records in one file that are not in a second file. , multiply mul·ti·ply
v.
1. To increase the amount, number, or degree of.

2. To breed or propagate.
, or divide, you need to understand that numbers are symbols that can be used in a variety of settings. The symbol 11, for instance, can refer to your age, the number of days left before vacation, the number of chimes you hear when the clock strikes 11 a.m., or the total number of cookies left over in three different boxes.

That's a tricky Adrian Thaws (born January 27, 1968), better known as Tricky, is an English rapper and musician important in the trip hop and British music scene (despite loathing the "trip hop" tag). He is noted for a whispering lyrical style that is half-rapped, half-sung.  concept, and the ability to understand numbers as symbols is one thing that separates people from other animals. Unlike other animals, people can figure out exactly what amount you get when you add 32 and 16, without even having to know whether the numbers refer to coins, apples, or anything else.

Spelke and her coworkers have done various experiments to find out how well young children can estimate quantities and add large numbers--even before they're taught arithmetic in school.

Their most recent attempt to uncover the foundations of our mathematical abilities involved five experiments. In each experiment, preschoolers sat in front of computers watching animations that briefly flashed various sets of dots on the screen. Each set contained from 10 to 58 dots.

First, Spelke and her colleagues presented a group of 5-year-olds with one set of blue dots and one set of red dots. The sets of dots appeared one at a time, and they flashed by too quickly to be counted.

The results showed that the children were usually able to pick the larger set, even if the dots were different sizes and took up different amounts of space.

For the second experiment, the 5-year-olds saw one group of blue dots, which was followed by a second group of blue dots, which was followed by a group of red dots. This setup See BIOS setup and install program.  was more complicated than the first, but the kids were still able to say whether there were more blue dots altogether or red dots, suggesting that they could both add and compare amounts.

In the third experiment, the children had to compare a group of dots that they saw to a certain number of tones that they heard. They could still pick the larger group. In the fourth, they successfully chose the largest grouping, given two sets of dots of the same color and one set of tones.

These results suggest that kids have an ability to add and compare numbers in different settings.

Word problems

In the fifth set of experiments, the researchers used words instead of dots or tones to present comparison problems.

Here's an example that's like the second experiment with just dots. Suppose you have 15 pennies. Your Mom She goes to the gym.  gives you about 10 more. Your sister has about 40. Who has more pennies: you or your sister?

When given in words, the 5-year-olds couldn't answer the question correctly. Most of them, however, could answer the question when it was given as sets of dots.

Overall, Spelke concluded that a child's sense of number doesn't depend on his or her ability to use language. Other studies with adults, she says, have shown that we use one part of our brains when doing arithmetic, such as adding 43 plus 72, and another part when estimating and comparing sets of dots.

Building blocks

So, certain building blocks for learning math seem to be in place before kids start school, Spelke says. It then takes years of math class for the brain to learn how to combine its inborn number sense with its language and other symbolic skills. High grades on algebra algebra, branch of mathematics concerned with operations on sets of numbers or other elements that are often represented by symbols. Algebra is a generalization of arithmetic and gains much of its power from dealing symbolically with elements and operations (such as  tests are the final result.

If you're trying hard and still getting B's and C's in math, though, you're not alone.

"Learning elementary arithmetic Elementary arithmetic is the most basic kind of mathematics: it concerns the operations of addition, subtraction, multiplication, and division. Most people learn elementary arithmetic in elementary school.  is surprisingly hard for all children," Spelke says. Her research shows, however, that you might be better at certain types of math than you think you are. That should give you hope.

"It is both surprising and encouraging to see," Spelke says, "that if you engage kids in thinking about number outside of symbolism Symbolism

In art, a loosely organized movement that flourished in the 1880s and '90s and was closely related to the Symbolist movement in literature. In reaction against both Realism and Impressionism, Symbolist painters stressed art's subjective, symbolic, and decorative
, they understand a lot."

Even then, most kids need to take classes and do lots of homework to learn arithmetic.

The effort is worth it, Spelke says, because without math, our culture couldn't function. "So much of our understanding of the world depends on mathematics," she says.

"Math is fundamental to measurement," Spelke says. "It's fundamental to technology. It's fundamental to science."

Additional Information

Questions about the Article

Word Find: Math Skills

http://www.sciencenewsforkids.org/articles/20051207/Feature1.asp
COPYRIGHT 2005 Science Service, Inc.
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 2005, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

 Reader Opinion

Title:

Comment:



 

Article Details
Printer friendly Cite/link Email Feedback
Title Annotation:how preschool children learn math
Author:Sohn, Emily
Publication:Science News for Kids
Geographic Code:1USA
Date:Dec 7, 2005
Words:998
Previous Article:Vent worms like it hot.
Next Article:Atom hauler.(Brief article)
Topics:



Related Articles
Block Play Performance Among Preschoolers As a Predictor of Later School Achievement in Mathematics.(Statistical Data Included)
Block Play Performance Among Preschoolers As a Predictor of Later School Achievement in Mathematics. (Research Into Practice).(Brief Article)
Preschool teachers' beliefs concerning the importance of various developmental skills and abilities.(Statistical Data Included)
KINDERGARTEN OFFERING TOUR FOR PARENTS.(News)
Preschool Teachers' Beliefs Concerning the Importance of Various Developmental Skills and Abilities. (Connecting Classroom Practice and...
The impact of ready environments on achievement in kindergarten.
Research into practice.
Benefits would be much greater than the $2 billion cost.
Calendar Math in Preschool and Primary Classrooms: Questioning the Curriculum.(Book review)

Terms of use | Copyright © 2009 Farlex, Inc. | Feedback | For webmasters | Submit articles