Spontaneous Focusing on Quantitative Relations in the Development of Children's Fraction Knowledge




Jake McMullen, Minna M. Hannula-Sormunen, Erno Lehtinen

PublisherRoutledge

2014

Cognition and Instruction

32

2

198

218

21

0737-0008

1532-690X

DOIhttps://doi.org/10.1080/07370008.2014.887085



While preschool-aged children display some skills with quantitative relations, later learning of related fraction concepts is difficult for many students. We present two studies that investigate young children's tendency of Spontaneous Focusing On quantitative Relations (SFOR), which may help explain individual differences in the development of fraction knowledge. In the first study, a cross-sectional sample of 84 kindergarteners to third graders completed tasks measuring their spontaneous recognition and use of quantitative relations and then completed the tasks again with explicit guidance to focus on quantitative relations. Findings suggest that SFOR is a measure of the spontaneous focusing of attention on quantitative relations and the use of these relations in reasoning. In the second (longitudinal) study, 25 first graders completed measures of SFOR tendency and a measure of fraction knowledge three years later. SFOR tendency was found to predict fraction knowledge, suggesting that it plays a role in the development of fraction knowledge.


Last updated on 2024-26-11 at 21:19