Monitoring proficiency: Growth of number sense in primary school

The purpose of this study is to develop tests for monitoring the number sense skills of primary school students based on proficiency definitions and to compare their number sense skills according to gender, school type, and mother's educational level. The first stage addressed to test developme...

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Veröffentlicht in:Psychology in the schools 2023-03, Vol.60 (3), p.707-728
Hauptverfasser: Gökçe, Semirhan, Güner, Pinar, Bastug, Muhammet
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container_title Psychology in the schools
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creator Gökçe, Semirhan
Güner, Pinar
Bastug, Muhammet
description The purpose of this study is to develop tests for monitoring the number sense skills of primary school students based on proficiency definitions and to compare their number sense skills according to gender, school type, and mother's educational level. The first stage addressed to test development in which anchor items were used for vertical equating of number sense tests across grade levels. In the second stage, the number sense skills were compared in terms of student characteristics. The participants were 2034 primary school students. Reliable and valid number sense tests each consisting of 20 items were developed that allow comparison among Grades 2, 3, and 4. The findings indicated that number sense skills were not developed sufficiently in early childhood and had different trends in terms of gender through grades. Moreover, private schools outperformed public schools and the gap became higher in Grade 4. The results also showed that mother's education is an important factor for children to have higher number sense skills. Number sense is a prominent predictor of mathematics performance and monitoring number sense progress helps to evaluate the effectiveness of mathematics instruction. Practitioner points Number sense is an essential component of mathematical understanding. The developed tests provide monitoring number sense skills. Common items in the tests across grades allow vertical articulation.
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The first stage addressed to test development in which anchor items were used for vertical equating of number sense tests across grade levels. In the second stage, the number sense skills were compared in terms of student characteristics. The participants were 2034 primary school students. Reliable and valid number sense tests each consisting of 20 items were developed that allow comparison among Grades 2, 3, and 4. The findings indicated that number sense skills were not developed sufficiently in early childhood and had different trends in terms of gender through grades. Moreover, private schools outperformed public schools and the gap became higher in Grade 4. The results also showed that mother's education is an important factor for children to have higher number sense skills. Number sense is a prominent predictor of mathematics performance and monitoring number sense progress helps to evaluate the effectiveness of mathematics instruction. 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source Wiley Journals; Applied Social Sciences Index & Abstracts (ASSIA); EBSCOhost Education Source
subjects Academic achievement
Achievement Gap
bookmark method
Childhood
Competence
differential item functioning
Early childhood education
Elementary School Students
Elementary schools
Gender
Gender Differences
Grade 2
Grade 3
Grade 4
Instructional Effectiveness
Mathematics
Mathematics Achievement
Mathematics Instruction
Mathematics Skills
Mathematics Tests
Mothers
Number Concepts
number sense
Parent Background
Parent Influence
Predictor Variables
Private Schools
proficiency definition
Progress Monitoring
Public Schools
Student Characteristics
Test Construction
test development
Test Items
Tests
title Monitoring proficiency: Growth of number sense in primary school
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