Understanding development requires assessing the relevant environment: Examples from mathematics learning

Although almost everyone agrees that the environment shapes children's learning, surprisingly few studies assess in detail the specific environments that shape children's learning of specific content. The present article briefly reviews examples of how such environmental assessments have i...

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Veröffentlicht in:New directions for child and adolescent development 2020-09, Vol.2020 (173), p.83-100
Hauptverfasser: Siegler, Robert S., Im, Soo‐Hyun, Braithwaite, David
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container_end_page 100
container_issue 173
container_start_page 83
container_title New directions for child and adolescent development
container_volume 2020
creator Siegler, Robert S.
Im, Soo‐Hyun
Braithwaite, David
description Although almost everyone agrees that the environment shapes children's learning, surprisingly few studies assess in detail the specific environments that shape children's learning of specific content. The present article briefly reviews examples of how such environmental assessments have improved understanding of child development in diverse areas, and examines in depth the contributions of analyses of one type of environment to one type of learning: how biased distributions of problems in mathematics textbooks influence children's learning of fraction arithmetic. We find extensive parallels between types of problems that are rarely presented in US textbooks and problems where children in the US encounter greater difficulty than might be expected from the apparent difficulty of the procedures involved. We also consider how some children master fraction arithmetic despite also learning the textbook distributions. Finally, we present findings from a recent intervention that indicates how children's fraction learning can be improved.
doi_str_mv 10.1002/cad.20372
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source Sociological Abstracts; Applied Social Sciences Index & Abstracts (ASSIA); Wiley Online Library All Journals
subjects Arithmetic
Bias
Child Development
Children
Children & youth
children's learning
Context Effect
decimals
Educational Environment
Environment
fraction arithmetic
Fractions
Learning environment
Learning Processes
Mastery Learning
Mathematics
Mathematics Education
number
Textbook Bias
Textbooks
title Understanding development requires assessing the relevant environment: Examples from mathematics learning
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