Supporting Young Children’s Development of Executive Function Through Early Mathematics

IF 3.4 Q1 EDUCATION & EDUCATIONAL RESEARCH
Christina Mulcahy, Crystal A. Day Hess, D. Clements, Jasmine R. Ernst, Sarah E. Pan, M. Mazzocco, Julie Sarama
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引用次数: 5

Abstract

Early childhood teachers face competing instructional priorities to support specific academic skills and general skills that underlie learning, such as executive function (EF) skills that allow children to control their own thinking and behavior. As the evidence shows, EF skills predict later mathematics achievement, and early mathematics predicts later EF. These relations between mathematics and EF suggest high-quality mathematics teaching has a dual benefit: Teachers can promote children’s math and EF competencies by embedding support for EF in high-quality mathematics activities. Children benefit when guided to reflect on solutions and alternative strategies, and teachers benefit from guidance on how to support both math and EF. Finally, research on teachers developing both domains can inform educational policy.
通过早期数学支持幼儿执行功能的发展
幼儿教师面临着相互竞争的教学优先事项,以支持作为学习基础的特定学术技能和一般技能,如允许儿童控制自己思维和行为的执行功能(EF)技能。证据表明,EF技能可以预测后期的数学成绩,早期的数学可以预测后期EF。数学和EF之间的这些关系表明,高质量的数学教学有双重好处:教师可以通过在高质量数学活动中嵌入对EF的支持来提高儿童的数学和EF能力。当被引导反思解决方案和替代策略时,孩子们会受益,而教师则会从如何支持数学和EF的指导中受益。最后,对教师发展这两个领域的研究可以为教育政策提供信息。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
Policy Insights from the Behavioral and Brain Sciences
Policy Insights from the Behavioral and Brain Sciences Social Sciences-Public Administration
CiteScore
5.30
自引率
0.00%
发文量
24
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