解读儿童空间技能、数学和算术策略之间的关联:分解问题

Wenke Möhring, Léonie Moll, Magdalena Szubielska
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引用次数: 0

摘要

一些研究揭示了心智旋转与数学任务之间的联系,但这一联系的干预过程仍未得到深入探讨。在此,我们旨在研究儿童的心智旋转技能是否与他们使用分解策略解决算术问题的准确性有关,从而探究一个潜在的干预过程。为此,我们对 6 至 8 岁的儿童(人数 = 183)进行了一项计时心理旋转任务的抽样调查,并要求儿童解决几个算术问题,同时评估他们的解题策略。每道算术题结束后,我们都会询问儿童解决相应算术题的策略,这些策略被分为计算策略、分解策略或检索策略。分析控制了年龄、性别、流畅度和语言推理能力。结果表明,儿童在心算旋转任务中的反应时间和准确性最好用旋转角度的线性函数来解释,这表明他们使用了动态心算转换策略。多重中介模型显示,心智旋转技能较高的儿童更倾向于使用分解等更高层次的心智策略,这反过来又提高了他们解决算术问题的准确性。其他算术策略均未显示出显著的间接效应。这些发现表明,思维旋转能力较强的儿童可能会从直观和灵活地转换数字大小中获益,从而增加分解策略的使用频率。总之,分解可能在儿童心理旋转与算术技能之间的联系中发挥着独特的作用,这对规划未来的训练和实验研究是一个重要的信息。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。

Unpacking associations among children’s spatial skills, mathematics, and arithmetic strategies: decomposition matters

Unpacking associations among children’s spatial skills, mathematics, and arithmetic strategies: decomposition matters

Several studies revealed links between mental rotation and mathematical tasks, but the intervening processes in this connection remain rather unexplored. Here, we aimed to investigate whether children’s mental rotation skills relate to their accuracy in solving arithmetic problems via their usage of decomposition strategies, thus probing one potential intervening process. To this end, we examined a sample of 6- to 8-year-olds (N = 183) with a chronometric mental rotation task, and asked children to solve several arithmetic problems while assessing their solution strategies. After each arithmetic problem, children were asked about their strategy to solve the respective arithmetic problem and these were classified as either counting, decomposition, or retrieval strategies. Analyses were controlled for age, sex, fluid and verbal reasoning. Results indicated that children’s response times and accuracy in the mental rotation task were best explained by linear functions of rotation angle, suggesting the usage of dynamic mental transformation strategies. A multiple mediation model revealed that children with higher mental rotation skills were more inclined to use higher-level mental strategies such as decomposition which in turn increased their accuracy of solving arithmetic problems. None of the other arithmetic strategies revealed significant indirect effects. These findings suggest that children with higher mental rotation skills may profit from visualizing and flexibly transforming numerical magnitudes, increasing the frequency of decomposition strategies. Overall, decomposition may play a unique role in the connection between children’s mental rotation and arithmetic skills, which is an essential information for planning future training and experimental studies.

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