| Literature DB >> 25240152 |
Marina Vasilyeva1, Elida V Laski2, Anna Ermakova3, Weng-Feng Lai4, Yoonkyung Jeong5, Amy Hachigian3.
Abstract
East Asian students consistently outperform students from other nations in mathematics. One explanation for this advantage is a language account; East Asian languages, unlike most Western languages, provide cues about the base-10 structure of multi-digit numbers, facilitating the development of base-10 number representations. To test this view, the current study examined how kindergartners represented two-digit numbers using single unit-blocks and ten-blocks. The participants (N=272) were from four language groups (Korean, Mandarin, English, and Russian) that vary in the extent of "transparency" of the base-10 structure. In contrast to previous findings with older children, kindergartners showed no cross-language variability in the frequency of producing base-10 representations. Furthermore, they showed a pattern of within-language variability that was not consistent with the language account and was likely attributable to experiential factors. These findings suggest that language might not play as critical a role in the development of base-10 representations as suggested in earlier research.Entities:
Keywords: Base-10; Cross-national; Language; Mathematics; Numeric; Representation
Mesh:
Year: 2014 PMID: 25240152 DOI: 10.1016/j.jecp.2014.08.004
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Exp Child Psychol ISSN: 0022-0965