| Literature DB >> 28270780 |
Sara T Stacy1, Macey Cartwright2, Zjanya Arwood2, James P Canfield3, Heidi Kloos2.
Abstract
Students rarely practice math outside of school requirements, which we refer to as the "math-practice gap". This gap might be the reason why students struggle with math, making it urgent to develop means by which to address it. In the current paper, we propose that math apps offer a viable solution to the math-practice gap: Online apps can provide access to a large number of problems, tied to immediate feedback, and delivered in an engaging way. To substantiate this conversation, we looked at whether tablets are sufficiently engaging to motivate children's informal math practice. Our approach was to partner with education agencies via a community-based participatory research design. The three participating education agencies serve elementary-school students from low-SES communities, allowing us to look at tablet use by children who are unlikely to have extensive access to online math enrichment programs. At the same time, the agencies differed in several structural details, including whether our intervention took place during school time, after school, or during the summer. This allowed us to shed light on tablet feasibility under different organizational constraints. Our findings show that tablet-based math practice is engaging for young children, independent of the setting, the student's age, or the math concept that was tackled. At the same time, we found that student engagement was a function of the presence of caring adults to facilitate their online math practice.Entities:
Keywords: IXL; ipad; math education; math learning; technology
Year: 2017 PMID: 28270780 PMCID: PMC5318409 DOI: 10.3389/fpsyg.2017.00179
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Psychol ISSN: 1664-1078
Assumed mental activity for reading and math in K-6 grades.
| Grade/Subject | Content | Challenge for the Mind |
|---|---|---|
| Reading | Letter system | Attention to detail |
| Math | Number system | Attention to detail, precision, abstractness |
| Reading | Reading words | Attention to detail, fluency |
| Math | Addition/subtraction | Attention to detail, precision, fluency |
| Reading | Reading sentences | Attention to detail, fluency |
| Math | Multi-digit operations | Attention to detail, precision, fluency, relational reasoning, alternate meanings |
| Reading | Reading paragraphs | Fluency |
| Math | Multiplication/division | Abstractness, precision, interfering fluency |
| Reading | Reading essays | Fluency |
| Math | Fractions | Abstractness, attention to detail, precision, interfering Fluency, alternate meaning, relational reasoning |
| Reading | Reading chapters | Fluency |
| Math | Decimals | Abstractness, attention to detail, alternate meaning |
| Reading | Reading chapter books | Fluency |
| Math | Negative integers | Interfering fluency, attention to detail, alternate meaning |
Overview of settings.
| (1) Enrichment Program | (2) Summer Program | (3) In-School Program | (4) After-School Program | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Students | ||||
| Age range | 9–11 | 6–11 | 9–11 | 9–12 |
| Duration | 1 h | 4 h | 10 h | 20 h |
| Attendance | Mandatory | Mandatory | Mandatory | Voluntary |
| Type of facilitation | One-on-one | Small group | One-on-one | One-on-one |
| Adults training | Minimal | Medium | Minimal | High |
Data collected, separated by setting.
| (1) Enrichment Program | (2) Summer Program | (3) In-School Program | (4) After-School Program | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Informal observations | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes |
| Systematic observations | No | Yes1 | Yes2 | Yes2 |
| Math attitude survey | No | No | Yes | Yes |
| Math competence (T5 and T10 of WJ IV) | No | Yes | Yes | Yes |
| Student exit survey | No | No | No | Yes |
| Facilitator exit survey | No | No | Yes | No |
| Teacher interview | No | Yes | No | No |