Age-Related Changes in Children’s Strategies for Solving Two-Digit Addition Problems

The present study investigated how elementary-school children solve two-digit addition problems (e.g., 34+68). To achieve this end, we examined age-related differences in children’s strategy use and strategy performance. Results showed that (a) both third and fifth graders used a set of 9 strategies...

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Main Authors: Patrick Lemaire, Fleur Brun
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: PsychOpen 2018-01-01
Series:Journal of Numerical Cognition
Subjects:
Online Access:http://jnc.psychopen.eu/article/view/117
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spelling doaj-c837d95479de47fdb7a8178978198e222020-11-24T23:51:17ZengPsychOpenJournal of Numerical Cognition2363-87612018-01-013358259710.5964/jnc.v3i3.117jnc.v3i3.117Age-Related Changes in Children’s Strategies for Solving Two-Digit Addition ProblemsPatrick Lemaire0Fleur Brun1CNRS, Aix-Marseille University, Marseille, FranceCNRS, Aix-Marseille University, Marseille, FranceThe present study investigated how elementary-school children solve two-digit addition problems (e.g., 34+68). To achieve this end, we examined age-related differences in children’s strategy use and strategy performance. Results showed that (a) both third and fifth graders used a set of 9 strategies, (b) fifth-grade individuals used more strategies than third-grade individuals, (c) age-related differences in the size of strategy repertoire was partially explained by age-related differences in basic arithmetic fluency, (d) how often children used each available strategy changed with problem difficulty and children’s age, as younger children tended to focus more on one or two strategies and older children used a wider range of strategies, (e) increased arithmetic performance with age varied with problem difficulty both when overall performance was analyzed and when analyses of performance was restricted to children’s favorite strategy. The present findings have important implications for our understanding of how complex arithmetic performance changes with children’s age and change mechanisms underlying improved performance with age in complex arithmetic.http://jnc.psychopen.eu/article/view/117strategies, two-digit problem solvingdevelopment
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Patrick Lemaire
Fleur Brun
spellingShingle Patrick Lemaire
Fleur Brun
Age-Related Changes in Children’s Strategies for Solving Two-Digit Addition Problems
Journal of Numerical Cognition
strategies, two-digit problem solving
development
author_facet Patrick Lemaire
Fleur Brun
author_sort Patrick Lemaire
title Age-Related Changes in Children’s Strategies for Solving Two-Digit Addition Problems
title_short Age-Related Changes in Children’s Strategies for Solving Two-Digit Addition Problems
title_full Age-Related Changes in Children’s Strategies for Solving Two-Digit Addition Problems
title_fullStr Age-Related Changes in Children’s Strategies for Solving Two-Digit Addition Problems
title_full_unstemmed Age-Related Changes in Children’s Strategies for Solving Two-Digit Addition Problems
title_sort age-related changes in children’s strategies for solving two-digit addition problems
publisher PsychOpen
series Journal of Numerical Cognition
issn 2363-8761
publishDate 2018-01-01
description The present study investigated how elementary-school children solve two-digit addition problems (e.g., 34+68). To achieve this end, we examined age-related differences in children’s strategy use and strategy performance. Results showed that (a) both third and fifth graders used a set of 9 strategies, (b) fifth-grade individuals used more strategies than third-grade individuals, (c) age-related differences in the size of strategy repertoire was partially explained by age-related differences in basic arithmetic fluency, (d) how often children used each available strategy changed with problem difficulty and children’s age, as younger children tended to focus more on one or two strategies and older children used a wider range of strategies, (e) increased arithmetic performance with age varied with problem difficulty both when overall performance was analyzed and when analyses of performance was restricted to children’s favorite strategy. The present findings have important implications for our understanding of how complex arithmetic performance changes with children’s age and change mechanisms underlying improved performance with age in complex arithmetic.
topic strategies, two-digit problem solving
development
url http://jnc.psychopen.eu/article/view/117
work_keys_str_mv AT patricklemaire agerelatedchangesinchildrensstrategiesforsolvingtwodigitadditionproblems
AT fleurbrun agerelatedchangesinchildrensstrategiesforsolvingtwodigitadditionproblems
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