97 results on '"Outhwaite, Laura A."'
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2. Understanding How Educational Maths Apps Can Enhance Learning: A Content Analysis and Qualitative Comparative Analysis
- Author
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Outhwaite, Laura A., Early, Erin, Herodotou, Christothea, and Van Herwegen, Jo
- Abstract
Educational applications (apps) are ubiquitous within children's learning environments and emerging evidence has demonstrated their efficacy. However, it remains unclear what the active ingredients (ie, mechanisms), or combination of ingredients, of successful maths apps are. The current study developed a new, open-access, three-step framework for assessing the educational value of maths apps, comprised of type of app, mathematical content and app design features. When applied to a selection of available maths apps previously evaluated with children in the first 3 years of school (the final sample included 23 apps), results showed that practice-based apps were the most common app type tested (n = 15). Basic number skills, such as number representation and relationships, were the most common area of mathematics targeted by apps (n = 21). A follow-up qualitative comparative analysis showed observed learning outcomes with maths apps were enhanced when apps combined the following: a scaffolded and personalised learning journey (programmatic levelling) and explanations of why answers were right or wrong (explanatory feedback), as well as praise, such as 'Great job!' (motivational feedback). This novel evidence stresses the significance of feedback and levelling design features that teaching practitioners and other stakeholders should consider when deciding which apps to use with young children. Directions for future research are discussed.
- Published
- 2023
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3. Spatial Thinking in Practice: A Snapshot of Teacher's Spatial Activity Use in the Early Years' Classroom
- Author
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Gilligan-Lee, Katie A., Bradbury, Alice, Bradley, Charlotte, Farran, Emily K., Van Herwegen, Jo, Wyse, Dominic, and Outhwaite, Laura A.
- Abstract
Spatial thinking predicts Science, Technology, Engineering, and Mathematics achievement, yet is often absent from educational "policy." We provide benchmarks of teachers' usage and perceptions of spatial activities "in practice" in the reception classroom (first year of primary school). In this questionnaire study of educational professionals working in the reception classroom in England (N = 104), we found that spatial and numeracy activities were perceived as significantly less important, and were reportedly completed significantly less often, than literacy or life skills. Despite the lower perceived importance of spatial skills in curriculum guidance in England, rates of reported spatial activity use were encouragingly high and were broadly comparable to those of numeracy. Teachers had moderate anxiety levels for both spatial and mathematics domains. The findings highlight a need to elevate teachers' understanding of the importance of developing children's early spatial and numeracy skills, which may begin with efforts to reduce spatial and mathematics anxiety.
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Measuring Early Child Development across Low and Middle-Income Countries: A Systematic Review
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Munoz-Chereau, Bernardita, Ang, Lynn, Dockrell, Julie, Outhwaite, Laura, and Heffernan, Claire
- Abstract
The Sustainable Development Goals mandate that by 2030, all children should have access to quality early child development opportunities, healthcare and pre-primary education. Yet validated measures of ECD in low and middle income countries (LMICs) are rare. To address this gap, a Systematic Review (SR) of measures available to profile the development of children between the ages of 0-5 years in LMICs was undertaken. Drawing on education, psychology and health databases, we identified reliable, valid or measures adapted for use in LMICs for either assessments of children's development or their learning environments. The inclusion criteria were (1) peer reviewed papers published between January 2009 and May 2019; (2) assessment tools used to measure cognitive/language development or the early years or home environment in at least one LMIC; (3) report of the psychometric properties (validity and reliability) of the tool, and/or description of the cultural adaptability/translation process undertaken before applying it to a LMIC. Two hundred and forty-nine available records published in the last decade in peer-review journals and nine relevant systematic literature reviews were identified. Fifty-seven records were qualitatively synthesised based on their psychometric properties and cultural adaptation. Forty-three tools were reviewed utilising 12 criteria. Five elements of analysis present in Tables 2 and 3 (study, population tested, validity, reliability and cultural adaptability/translation) focused on the tools' psychometric properties and previous application in LMICs. A further seven dimensions outlined in Tables 4 and 5 identified specific characteristics of the tools from target age, administration method, domains, battery, accessibility, language and country/institution. We suggest these 12 key considerations for the selection of measurement tools that are applicable to effectively assess ECD in LMICs.
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- 2021
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5. The use of interactive maths apps to support early mathematical development in UK and Brazilian primary school children
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Outhwaite, Laura A.
- Subjects
BF Psychology ,LB1501 Primary education - Abstract
Developing strong mathematical skills at the start of primary school is vital for children's later learning and development. Educational maths apps delivered on touch-screen tablet devices are suited to primary education and an emerging evidence base demonstrates their potential to support young children's early mathematical development. The educational maths apps at the focus of thesis draw on the principles of active, engaged, meaningful, and socially interactive learning combined with curriculum-based content and specific learning goals. Using a mixed-methods, pragmatic approach and a multi-level, ecological, determinant framework, this thesis aimed to address how does app-based mathematics instruction work, who does it work for, and under what circumstances does it work? The UK Proof of Concept study (Chapter 4) showed children aged 4-5 years identified as low-achievers in mathematics (n = 12) who used the apps for 8 weeks made greater learning gains in mathematics compared to their typically attaining peers receiving standard mathematical practice (n = 15). No significant effect of children's socio-economic status was found but children with a poor memory capacity demonstrated stronger learning gains with the apps. Similar results were found in the Brazil Proof of Concept study (Chapter 5). After a 10-week intervention period, results showed children aged 5-6 years made greater progress in mathematics with the apps when delivered in their first (Brazilian Portuguese, n = 23) or second language (English, n = 20), compared to standard mathematical practice (n = 19). However, proficiency in the language of instruction was associated with increased learning gains. To further evaluate the maths apps as a form of quality mathematics instruction, a pupil-level randomised control trial was conducted in the UK with 389 children aged 4-5 years old (Chapter 6). Consistent with previous results, children randomly assigned to use the maths apps for 30 minutes a day, over 12 weeks either as a supplementary teaching aid (n = 126) or instead of one daily mathematics activity (n = 131) made significantly greater learning gains compared to children who received standard mathematical practice (n = 132). Results from the UK RCT Implementation Evaluation (Chapter 7) indicated that in order to maximise children's learning with the apps the implementation needs to be well organised, for example, integrating the apps into a consistent routine with well-organised equipment and a dedicated space in the classroom. Overall, the evidence presented in this thesis suggests the maths apps can provide an individualised and targeted form of mathematics practice that can add value to a well-balanced early years curriculum and contribute to the long-term journey towards ensuring quality education for all.
- Published
- 2019
6. Are you coping how I'm coping? An exploratory factor analysis of the Brief-COPE among caregivers of children with and without learning disabilities during COVID-19 restrictions in the UK
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Steindorsdottir, Freyja, primary, Goodall, Karen, additional, Christie, Hope, additional, McConachie, Doug, additional, Van Herwegen, Jo, additional, Ballantyne, Carrie, additional, Richards, Caroline, additional, Crawford, Hayley, additional, Outhwaite, Laura, additional, Gallagher-Mitchell, Thomas, additional, Moss, Joanna, additional, Khawam, Grace, additional, and Gillespie-Smith, Karri, additional
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- 2024
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7. Enacting Elementary Geometry: Participatory 'Haptic' Sense-Making
- Author
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Price, Sara, Yiannoutsou, Nikoleta, Johnson, Rose, and Outhwaite, Laura
- Abstract
A central assumption within the embodied cognition paradigm is that particular action experiences are instrumental in providing children with sensorimotor contingencies that form the foundation for conceptualisation of and, later, communication of mathematical ideas. Digital technology designs that foster specific movements offer promising foundations for young children's mathematical learning, together with haptic technologies that newly bring tactile sensorimotor experiences for children to draw on. This article reports on a qualitative study examining the role of a haptic learning environment supporting 7-8-year-old children's embodied exploration of 3D shape. It examined the in situ dynamic unfolding of interaction of pairs of children, as they engaged with a haptic device. Multimodal analysis was focused on the process of how the prescribed enaction of the device-mediated interaction, the kinds of action experiences and action schemes it elicited and the strategies children collaboratively developed to complete tasks. Findings show how specific action experiences and, later, communication experiences, were shaped, not only by the prescribed enaction of the design, but also by embodied participatory sense-making, and demonstrate the potential for haptic technology in mediating new learning experiences for mathematics.
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- 2021
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8. Using Interactive Apps to Support Learning of Elementary Maths in Multilingual Contexts: Implications for Practice and Policy Development in a Digital Age
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Pitchford, Nicola J., Gulliford, Anthea, Outhwaite, Laura A., Davitt, Lanaya J., Katabua, Evalisa, Essien, Anthony A., Liyanage, Indika, Series Editor, Adamson, Bob, Advisory Editor, Canagarajah, Suresh, Advisory Editor, Kirkpatrick, Andy, Advisory Editor, Singh, Parlo, Advisory Editor, Essien, Anthony A., editor, and Msimanga, Audrey, editor
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- 2021
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9. Language Counts When Learning Mathematics with Interactive Apps
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Outhwaite, Laura A., Gulliford, Anthea, and Pitchford, Nicola J.
- Abstract
When available in multiple languages, educational apps can deliver the same mathematics instruction in the child's first language or different language of instruction. This pilot study examined the feasibility of a maths app intervention compared to standard mathematical practice with 61 children aged 5-6 years attending a bilingual immersion school in Brazil. The apps were delivered in either the child's first (L1, Brazilian Portuguese) or second (L2, English) language, while app content, time on task, and school setting were consistent across the two treatment groups. Time on task in the comparison group was less. After 10 weeks, results showed children made significant mathematical learning gains with the apps, for both languages of instruction, compared to standard practice: the finding is discussed in relation to the threat of time spent on task. Children using the apps in Brazilian Portuguese (L1) completed more app topics than children using the apps in English (L2) and proficiency in language of instruction correlated positively with app progress. As children's L1 was significantly stronger than their L2 proficiency, this suggests the apps were most effectively implemented in their L1. This study advances the conjoining of bilingual educational theories to educational apps in a controlled, real-world, bilingual immersion setting and highlights important directions for improving app-based mathematics instruction for bilingual children.
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- 2020
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10. A New Methodological Approach for Evaluating the Impact of Educational Intervention Implementation on Learning Outcomes
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Outhwaite, Laura A., Gulliford, Anthea, and Pitchford, Nicola J.
- Abstract
Randomized control trials (RCTs) are commonly regarded as the 'gold standard' for evaluating educational interventions. While this experimental design is valuable in establishing causal relationships between the tested intervention and outcomes, reliance on statistical aggregation typically underplays the situated context in which interventions are implemented. Developing innovative, systematic methods for evaluating implementation and understanding its impact on outcomes is vital to moving educational evaluation research beyond questions of 'what works', towards better understanding the mechanisms underpinning an intervention's effects. The current study presents a pragmatic, two-phased approach that combines qualitative data with quantitative analyses to examine the causal relationships between intervention implementation and outcomes. This new methodological approach is illustrated in the context of a maths app intervention recently evaluated in a RCT across 11 schools. In phase I, four implementation themes were identified; 'teacher support', 'teacher supervision', 'implementation quality', and 'established routine'. In phase II, 'established routine' was found to predict 41% of the variance in children's learning outcomes with the apps. This has significant implications for future scaling. Overall, this new methodological approach offers an innovative method for combining process and impact evaluations when seeking to gain a more nuanced understanding of what works in education and why.
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- 2020
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11. Raising Early Achievement in Math with Interactive Apps: A Randomized Control Trial
- Author
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Outhwaite, Laura A., Faulder, Marc, Gulliford, Anthea, and Pitchford, Nicola J.
- Abstract
Improving provision and raising achievement in early math for young children is of national importance. Child-centered apps offer an opportunity to develop strong foundations in learning math as they deliver one-to-one instruction. Reported here is the first pupil-level randomized control trial in the United Kingdom of interactive math apps designed for early years education, with 389 children aged 4-5 years. The original and rigorous research design disentangled the impact of the math apps as a form of quality math instruction from additional exposure to math. It was predicted that using the apps would increase math achievement when implemented by teachers in addition to standard math activities (treatment) or instead of a regular small group-based math activity (time-equivalent treatment) compared with standard math practice only (control). After a 12-week intervention period, results showed significantly greater math learning gains for both forms of app implementation compared with standard math practice. The math apps supported targeted basic facts and concepts and generalized to higher-level math reasoning and problem solving skills. There were no significant differences between the 2 forms of math app implementation, suggesting the math apps can be implemented in a well-balanced curriculum. Features of the interactive apps, which are grounded in instructional psychology and combine aspects of direct instruction with play, may account for the observed learning gains. These novel results suggest that structured, content-rich, interactive apps can provide a vehicle for efficiently delivering high-quality math instruction for all pupils in a classroom context and can effectively raise achievement in early math.
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- 2019
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12. Early years practitioners’ training, beliefs and practices concerning mathematics: implications for education and practice
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Costa, Hiwet Mariam, primary, Outhwaite, Laura Ann, additional, and Van Herwegen, Jo, additional
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- 2023
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13. Closing the gap: Efficacy of a tablet intervention to support the development of early mathematical skills in UK primary school children
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Outhwaite, Laura A., Gulliford, Anthea, and Pitchford, Nicola J.
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- 2017
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14. Educational apps and learning: Current evidence on design and evaluation.
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Outhwaite, Laura A. and Van Herwegen, Jo
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INSTRUCTIONAL systems design , *EDUCATIONAL technology , *STRUGGLING readers - Abstract
An introduction to a special section which provides studies on evidence on the instructional design and rigorous evaluation of educational apps on children's learning outcomes is presented including comparative judgments of the design features of the five educational apps evaluated as part of the Global Learning XPRIZE in remote Tanzania, a qualitative comparative analysis of eight educational math apps, and a study of children with reading difficulties in England.
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- 2023
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15. App-based support for parental self-efficacy in the first 1,000 days: A randomized control trial
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Outhwaite, Laura A., primary
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- 2023
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16. Assessment Tools for Early Mathematical Development: A Systematic Review
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Outhwaite, Laura and Van Herwegen, Jo
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FOS: Psychology ,Educational Psychology ,Early Childhood Education ,education ,Developmental Psychology ,Educational Methods ,Psychology ,Child Psychology ,Social and Behavioral Sciences ,Education ,Educational Assessment, Evaluation, and Research - Abstract
To support the development of intervention and longitudinal studies in mathematical learning and development, there is a need to synthesise the assessment tools currently available that can appropriately measure children’s mathematical skills in early childhood (0-8 years). In response, this systematic review will identify and catalogue assessment tools, including direct assessments, observation checklists, and teacher/parent questionnaires for early mathematical skills. The psychometric properties (i.e., reliability and validity) and practical considerations for each assessment tool will be examined.
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- 2022
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17. Can Maths Apps Add Value to Learning? A Content Analysis
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Outhwaite, Laura, Van Herwegen, Jo, Early, Erin, and Herodotou, Christothea
- Subjects
FOS: Psychology ,Instructional Media Design ,Educational Psychology ,Developmental Psychology ,Science and Mathematics Education ,Psychology ,Social and Behavioral Sciences ,Education - Abstract
This content analysis is part of a Nuffield-funded research project on educational maths apps for young children. It follows on from a systematic review synthesising current evidence on the impact of educational maths applications (apps) used at home or at school for children in the first three years of compulsory school. The project is led by Dr Laura Outhwaite with Dr Jo Van Herwegen, Dr Christothea Herodotou and Dr Erin Early.
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- 2022
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18. Oliiki preliminary data
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Outhwaite, Laura
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- 2022
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19. Can Maths Apps Add Value to Learning? A Systematic Review
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Outhwaite, Laura, Van Herwegen, Jo, Early, Erin, and Herodotou, Christothea
- Subjects
FOS: Psychology ,Instructional Media Design ,Educational Psychology ,Early Childhood Education ,Developmental Psychology ,Science and Mathematics Education ,Psychology ,Elementary Education ,Social and Behavioral Sciences ,Education - Abstract
This systematic review is part of a Nuffield-funded research project on educational maths apps for young children. The project is led by Dr Laura Outhwaite with Dr Jo Van Herwegen, Dr Christothea Herodotou and Dr Erin Early. The systematic review aims to synthesise the research literature that has examined the impact of educational maths applications (apps) used at home or at school for children in the first three years of compulsory school (e.g., the Early Years Foundation Stage [EYFS]- Year 2 in England children will be aged 4-7 years). Across all included studies, a narrative synthesis of the evidence will be conducted. If there is a sufficient level of homogeneity across the included studies, a meta-analysis will also be conducted, which will focus on mathematical learning outcomes. Overall, this review will provide an overview of current international research evidence on educational maths apps, creating an understanding of current research quality, current and new methodological considerations, and directions for future research.
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- 2022
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20. Spatial Thinking in Practice: A snapshot of teacher’s spatial activity use in the early years’ classroom
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Bradbury, Alice, Van Herwegen, Jo, Gilligan-Lee, Katie, Farran, Emily K., Wyse, Dominic, Outhwaite, Laura Ann, and Bradley, Charlotte
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Cognitive Neuroscience ,Developmental and Educational Psychology ,Experimental and Cognitive Psychology ,Education - Abstract
Spatial thinking predicts Science, Technology, Engineering and Mathematics achievement, yet is often absent from educational policy. We provide the first benchmarks of teachers’ usage and perceptions of spatial activities in practice in the reception classroom. Using a questionnaire study with educational professionals working in the reception (4-5 years) classroom in England (N=104), we found that spatial and numeracy activities were perceived as significantly less important, and were completed significantly less often, than literacy or life skills. Given the lack of focus on spatial skills in the curriculum guidance in England, rates of spatial activity use were encouragingly high and were broadly comparable to those of numeracy. Teachers’ anxiety levels were moderate for both spatial and mathematics domains. The findings highlight a need to elevate teacher’s understanding of the importance of developing children’s early spatial and numeracy skills, which may begin with efforts to reduce spatial and mathematics anxiety.
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- 2022
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21. Spatial Thinking in Practice: A snapshot of teacher’s spatial activity use in the early years’ classroom.
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Gilligan-Lee, Katie Anne, primary, Bradbury, Alice, additional, Bradley, Charlotte, additional, Farran, Emily Kate, additional, Van Herwegen, Jo, additional, Wyse, Dominic, additional, and Outhwaite, Laura Ann, additional
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- 2022
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22. Raising mathematical attainment from the Early Years.
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OUTHWAITE, LAURA A, RANZATO, ERICA, and VAN HERWEGEN, JO
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MATH anxiety , *EDUCATIONAL psychology , *EDUCATIONAL sociology , *EDUCATION policy , *SOCIAL accounting , *EDUCATIONAL benefits - Abstract
The article addresses importance of strong mathematical skills in children's educational, economic, social and health outcomes, and raising math attainment at primary school. Topics discussed include percentage of children affected by mathematical underachievement in the United Kingdom (UK), changes in the early learning goals (ELGs) in England, and information on schools white paper "Parent Pledge."
- Published
- 2022
23. sj-pdf-1-ecr-10.1177_1476718X211020031 – Supplemental material for Measuring early child development across low and middle-income countries: A systematic review
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Munoz-Chereau, Bernardita, Ang, Lynn, Dockrell, Julie, Outhwaite, Laura, and Heffernan, Claire
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Education - Abstract
Supplemental material, sj-pdf-1-ecr-10.1177_1476718X211020031 for Measuring early child development across low and middle-income countries: A systematic review by Bernardita Munoz-Chereau, Lynn Ang, Julie Dockrell, Laura Outhwaite and Claire Heffernan in Journal of Early Childhood Research
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- 2021
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24. Preschool Teachers’ training, beliefs and practices concerning mathematics in pre-schools in the UK: implication for education and practice
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Costa, Hiwet Mariam, primary, Outhwaite, Laura Ann, additional, and Van Herwegen, Jo, additional
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- 2021
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25. Supporting small and medium-sized enterprises in the educational technology sector to become more research-minded: Introduction to a small collection
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Clark-Wilson, Alison, primary, Moeini, Anissa, additional, Anand, Kusha, additional, Blake, Canan, additional, Cukurova, Mutlu, additional, De Ossorno Garcia, Santiago, additional, Issroff, Kim, additional, Luckin, Rose, additional, Olatunj, Tunde, additional, Outhwaite, Laura, additional, and Weatherby, Kristen, additional
- Published
- 2021
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26. Enacting Elementary Geometry: Participatory ‘Haptic’ Sense-Making
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Price, Sara, primary, Yiannoutsou, Nikoleta, additional, Johnson, Rose, additional, and Outhwaite, Laura, additional
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
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27. Secondary Benefits to Attentional Processing Through Intervention With an Interactive Maths App
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Pitchford, Nicola J., primary and Outhwaite, Laura A., additional
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- 2019
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28. A new methodological approach for evaluating the impact of educational intervention implementation on learning outcomes
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Outhwaite, Laura A., primary, Gulliford, Anthea, additional, and Pitchford, Nicola J., additional
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- 2019
- Full Text
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29. Raising Early Achievement in Math With Interactive Apps: A Randomized Control Trial
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Outhwaite, Laura A., Faulder, Marc, Gulliford, Anthea, and Pitchford, Nicola J.
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interactive learning environments ,elementary education ,improving classroom teaching ,education ,mental disorders ,MathematicsofComputing_GENERAL ,Math and Reading ,behavioral disciplines and activities ,psychological phenomena and processes ,math achievement - Abstract
Improving provision and raising achievement in early math for young children is of national importance. Child-centered apps offer an opportunity to develop strong foundations in learning math as they deliver one-to-one instruction. Reported here is the first pupil-level randomized control trial in the United Kingdom of interactive math apps designed for early years education, with 389 children aged 4–5 years. The original and rigorous research design disentangled the impact of the math apps as a form of quality math instruction from additional exposure to math. It was predicted that using the apps would increase math achievement when implemented by teachers in addition to standard math activities (treatment) or instead of a regular small group-based math activity (time-equivalent treatment) compared with standard math practice only (control). After a 12-week intervention period, results showed significantly greater math learning gains for both forms of app implementation compared with standard math practice. The math apps supported targeted basic facts and concepts and generalized to higher-level math reasoning and problem solving skills. There were no significant differences between the 2 forms of math app implementation, suggesting the math apps can be implemented in a well-balanced curriculum. Features of the interactive apps, which are grounded in instructional psychology and combine aspects of direct instruction with play, may account for the observed learning gains. These novel results suggest that structured, content-rich, interactive apps can provide a vehicle for efficiently delivering high-quality math instruction for all pupils in a classroom context and can effectively raise achievement in early math., Educational Impact and Implications Statement In a pupil-level randomized control trial we evaluated the effectiveness of a new math app intervention to support young children’s early math development. The results showed children using the math apps either as a supplementary intervention or instead of a small group teacher-led math activity made significant learning gains in comparison with children receiving standard practice only. This study suggests high-quality math apps can be used as a form of quality math instruction in a well-rounded curriculum to raise achievement in early math for all children.
- Published
- 2017
30. Can Touch Screen Tablets be Used to Assess Cognitive and Motor Skills in Early Years Primary School Children? A Cross-Cultural Study
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Pitchford, Nicola J., primary and Outhwaite, Laura A., additional
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- 2016
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31. Should Touch Screen Tablets Be Used to Improve Educational Outcomes in Primary School Children in Developing Countries?
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Hubber, Paula J., primary, Outhwaite, Laura A., additional, Chigeda, Antonie, additional, McGrath, Simon, additional, Hodgen, Jeremy, additional, and Pitchford, Nicola J., additional
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- 2016
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32. Fine Motor Skills Predict Maths Ability Better than They Predict Reading Ability in the Early Primary School Years
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Pitchford, Nicola J., primary, Papini, Chiara, additional, Outhwaite, Laura A., additional, and Gulliford, Anthea, additional
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- 2016
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33. Do maths apps add value to early education?
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OUTHWAITE, LAURA A., GULLIFORD, ANTHEA, and PITCHFORD, NICOLA J.
- Subjects
- *
MATHEMATICS education , *MOBILE apps - Abstract
The article discusses how educational maths apps can provide an individualized and targeted form of mathematics practice which can support mastery of early mathematical skills and how this provides a strong foundation for higher-order mathematical reasoning and problem-solving skills.
- Published
- 2019
34. Raising early achievement in math with interactive apps: a randomized control trial
- Author
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Outhwaite, Laura A., Faulder, Marc, Gulliford, Anthea, Pitchford, Nicola J., Outhwaite, Laura A., Faulder, Marc, Gulliford, Anthea, and Pitchford, Nicola J.
- Abstract
Improving provision and raising achievement in early math for young children is of national importance. Child-centered apps offer an opportunity to develop strong foundations in learning math as they deliver one-to-one instruction. Reported here is the first pupil-level randomized control trial in the United Kingdom of interactive math apps designed for early years education, with 389 children aged 4–5 years. The original and rigorous research design disentangled the impact of the math apps as a form of quality math instruction from additional exposure to math. It was predicted that using the apps would increase math achievement when implemented by teachers in addition to standard math activities (treatment) or instead of a regular small group-based math activity (time-equivalent treatment) compared with standard math practice only (control). After a 12-week intervention period, results showed significantly greater math learning gains for both forms of app implementation compared with standard math practice. The math apps supported targeted basic facts and concepts and generalized to higher-level math reasoning and problem solving skills. There were no significant differences between the 2 forms of math app implementation, suggesting the math apps can be implemented in a well-balanced curriculum. Features of the interactive apps, which are grounded in instructional psychology and combine aspects of direct instruction with play, may account for the observed learning gains. These novel results suggest that structured, content-rich, interactive apps can provide a vehicle for efficiently delivering high-quality math instruction for all pupils in a classroom context and can effectively raise achievement in early math.
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
35. Closing the gap: efficacy of a tablet intervention to support the development of early mathematical skills in UK primary school children
- Author
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Outhwaite, Laura A., Gulliford, Anthea, Pitchford, Nicola J., Outhwaite, Laura A., Gulliford, Anthea, and Pitchford, Nicola J.
- Abstract
The efficacy of a hand-held tablet technology intervention with learner-centred interactive software aimed at supporting the development of early maths skills was evaluated in four studies conducted in three UK primary schools. Immediate and sustained gains in mathematics were determined by comparing maths performance before, immediately after, and 5-months after the intervention. The impact of the child's first language, socio-economic status and basic cognitive skills (non-verbal intelligence, memory, processing speed and receptive vocabulary) on learning gains was also explored. In total, 133 pupils aged 4–7 years took part. Class teachers implemented the maths intervention for a specified period of time. Results showed significant immediate and sustained learning gains following the intervention, particularly for children identified as low-achievers. No significant effect of child's first language or socio-economic status was found but children with weaker memory skills demonstrated stronger learning gains. Overall, these findings indicate that tablet technology can provide a form of individualised effective support for early maths development, when software is age appropriate and grounded in a well-designed curriculum. Apps that incorporate repetitive and interactive features might help to reduce cognitive task demands, which could be particularly beneficial to low-achievers and could help to close the gap in early maths attainment from the start of primary school.
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36. Can touch screen tablets be used to assess cognitive and motor skills in early years primary school children? A cross-cultural study
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Pitchford, Nicola J., Outhwaite, Laura A., Pitchford, Nicola J., and Outhwaite, Laura A.
- Abstract
Assessment of cognitive and motor functions is fundamental for developmental and neuropsychological profiling. Assessments are usually conducted on an individual basis, with a trained examiner, using standardized paper and pencil tests, and can take up to an hour or more to complete, depending on the nature of the test. This makes traditional standardized assessments of child development largely unsuitable for use in low-income countries. Touch screen tablets afford the opportunity to assess cognitive functions in groups of participants, with untrained administrators, with precision recording of responses, thus automating the assessment process. In turn, this enables cognitive profiling to be conducted in contexts where access to qualified examiners and standardized assessments are rarely available. As such, touch screen assessments could provide a means of assessing child development in both low- and high-income countries, which would afford cross-cultural comparisons to be made with the same assessment tool. However, before touch screen tablet assessments can be used for cognitive profiling in low-to-high-income countries they need to be shown to provide reliable and valid measures of performance. We report the development of a new touch screen tablet assessment of basic cognitive and motor functions for use with early years primary school children in low- and high-income countries. Measures of spatial intelligence, visual attention, short-term memory, working memory, manual processing speed, and manual coordination are included as well as mathematical knowledge. To investigate if this new touch screen assessment tool can be used for cross-cultural comparisons we administered it to a sample of children (N = 283) spanning standards 1–3 in a low-income country, Malawi, and a smaller sample of children (N = 70) from first year of formal schooling from a high-income country, the UK. Split-half reliability, test-retest reliability, face validity, convergent construct v
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37. Fine motor skills predict maths ability better than they predict reading ability in the early primary school years
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Pitchford, Nicola J., Papini, Chiara, Outhwaite, Laura A., Gulliford, Anthea, Pitchford, Nicola J., Papini, Chiara, Outhwaite, Laura A., and Gulliford, Anthea
- Abstract
Fine motor skills have long been recognised as an important foundation for development in other domains. However, more precise insights into the role of fine motor skills, and their relationships to other skills in mediating early educational achievements, are needed to support the development of optimal educational interventions. We explored concurrent relationships between two components of fine motor skills, Fine Motor Precision and Fine Motor Integration, and early reading and maths development in two studies with primary school children of low-to-mid socio-economic status in the U.K. Two key findings were revealed. First, despite being in the first two years of primary school education, significantly better performance was found in reading compared to maths across both studies. This may reflect the protective effects of recent national-level interventions to promote early literacy skills in young children in the U.K. that have not been similarly promoted for maths. Second, fine motor skills were a better predictor of early maths ability than they were of early reading ability. Hierarchical multiple regression revealed that fine motor skills did not significantly predict reading ability when verbal short-term memory was taken into account. In contrast, Fine Motor Integration remained a significant predictor of maths ability, even after the influence of nonverbal IQ had been accounted for. These results suggest that fine motor skills should have a pivotal role in educational interventions designed to support the development of early mathematical skills.
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
38. Should touch screen tablets be used to improve educational outcomes in primary school children in developing countries?
- Author
-
Hubber, Paula Jane, Outhwaite, Laura A., Chigeda, Antonie, McGrath, Simon, Hodgen, Jeremy, Pitchford, Nicola J., Hubber, Paula Jane, Outhwaite, Laura A., Chigeda, Antonie, McGrath, Simon, Hodgen, Jeremy, and Pitchford, Nicola J.
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
39. Raising early achievement in math with interactive apps: a randomized control trial
- Author
-
Outhwaite, Laura A., Faulder, Marc, Gulliford, Anthea, Pitchford, Nicola J., Outhwaite, Laura A., Faulder, Marc, Gulliford, Anthea, and Pitchford, Nicola J.
- Abstract
Improving provision and raising achievement in early math for young children is of national importance. Child-centered apps offer an opportunity to develop strong foundations in learning math as they deliver one-to-one instruction. Reported here is the first pupil-level randomized control trial in the United Kingdom of interactive math apps designed for early years education, with 389 children aged 4–5 years. The original and rigorous research design disentangled the impact of the math apps as a form of quality math instruction from additional exposure to math. It was predicted that using the apps would increase math achievement when implemented by teachers in addition to standard math activities (treatment) or instead of a regular small group-based math activity (time-equivalent treatment) compared with standard math practice only (control). After a 12-week intervention period, results showed significantly greater math learning gains for both forms of app implementation compared with standard math practice. The math apps supported targeted basic facts and concepts and generalized to higher-level math reasoning and problem solving skills. There were no significant differences between the 2 forms of math app implementation, suggesting the math apps can be implemented in a well-balanced curriculum. Features of the interactive apps, which are grounded in instructional psychology and combine aspects of direct instruction with play, may account for the observed learning gains. These novel results suggest that structured, content-rich, interactive apps can provide a vehicle for efficiently delivering high-quality math instruction for all pupils in a classroom context and can effectively raise achievement in early math.
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
40. Closing the gap: efficacy of a tablet intervention to support the development of early mathematical skills in UK primary school children
- Author
-
Outhwaite, Laura A., Gulliford, Anthea, Pitchford, Nicola J., Outhwaite, Laura A., Gulliford, Anthea, and Pitchford, Nicola J.
- Abstract
The efficacy of a hand-held tablet technology intervention with learner-centred interactive software aimed at supporting the development of early maths skills was evaluated in four studies conducted in three UK primary schools. Immediate and sustained gains in mathematics were determined by comparing maths performance before, immediately after, and 5-months after the intervention. The impact of the child's first language, socio-economic status and basic cognitive skills (non-verbal intelligence, memory, processing speed and receptive vocabulary) on learning gains was also explored. In total, 133 pupils aged 4–7 years took part. Class teachers implemented the maths intervention for a specified period of time. Results showed significant immediate and sustained learning gains following the intervention, particularly for children identified as low-achievers. No significant effect of child's first language or socio-economic status was found but children with weaker memory skills demonstrated stronger learning gains. Overall, these findings indicate that tablet technology can provide a form of individualised effective support for early maths development, when software is age appropriate and grounded in a well-designed curriculum. Apps that incorporate repetitive and interactive features might help to reduce cognitive task demands, which could be particularly beneficial to low-achievers and could help to close the gap in early maths attainment from the start of primary school.
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
41. Can touch screen tablets be used to assess cognitive and motor skills in early years primary school children? A cross-cultural study
- Author
-
Pitchford, Nicola J., Outhwaite, Laura A., Pitchford, Nicola J., and Outhwaite, Laura A.
- Abstract
Assessment of cognitive and motor functions is fundamental for developmental and neuropsychological profiling. Assessments are usually conducted on an individual basis, with a trained examiner, using standardized paper and pencil tests, and can take up to an hour or more to complete, depending on the nature of the test. This makes traditional standardized assessments of child development largely unsuitable for use in low-income countries. Touch screen tablets afford the opportunity to assess cognitive functions in groups of participants, with untrained administrators, with precision recording of responses, thus automating the assessment process. In turn, this enables cognitive profiling to be conducted in contexts where access to qualified examiners and standardized assessments are rarely available. As such, touch screen assessments could provide a means of assessing child development in both low- and high-income countries, which would afford cross-cultural comparisons to be made with the same assessment tool. However, before touch screen tablet assessments can be used for cognitive profiling in low-to-high-income countries they need to be shown to provide reliable and valid measures of performance. We report the development of a new touch screen tablet assessment of basic cognitive and motor functions for use with early years primary school children in low- and high-income countries. Measures of spatial intelligence, visual attention, short-term memory, working memory, manual processing speed, and manual coordination are included as well as mathematical knowledge. To investigate if this new touch screen assessment tool can be used for cross-cultural comparisons we administered it to a sample of children (N = 283) spanning standards 1–3 in a low-income country, Malawi, and a smaller sample of children (N = 70) from first year of formal schooling from a high-income country, the UK. Split-half reliability, test-retest reliability, face validity, convergent construct v
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
42. Should touch screen tablets be used to improve educational outcomes in primary school children in developing countries?
- Author
-
Hubber, Paula Jane, Outhwaite, Laura A., Chigeda, Antonie, McGrath, Simon, Hodgen, Jeremy, Pitchford, Nicola J., Hubber, Paula Jane, Outhwaite, Laura A., Chigeda, Antonie, McGrath, Simon, Hodgen, Jeremy, and Pitchford, Nicola J.
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
43. Fine motor skills predict maths ability better than they predict reading ability in the early primary school years
- Author
-
Pitchford, Nicola J., Papini, Chiara, Outhwaite, Laura A., Gulliford, Anthea, Pitchford, Nicola J., Papini, Chiara, Outhwaite, Laura A., and Gulliford, Anthea
- Abstract
Fine motor skills have long been recognised as an important foundation for development in other domains. However, more precise insights into the role of fine motor skills, and their relationships to other skills in mediating early educational achievements, are needed to support the development of optimal educational interventions. We explored concurrent relationships between two components of fine motor skills, Fine Motor Precision and Fine Motor Integration, and early reading and maths development in two studies with primary school children of low-to-mid socio-economic status in the U.K. Two key findings were revealed. First, despite being in the first two years of primary school education, significantly better performance was found in reading compared to maths across both studies. This may reflect the protective effects of recent national-level interventions to promote early literacy skills in young children in the U.K. that have not been similarly promoted for maths. Second, fine motor skills were a better predictor of early maths ability than they were of early reading ability. Hierarchical multiple regression revealed that fine motor skills did not significantly predict reading ability when verbal short-term memory was taken into account. In contrast, Fine Motor Integration remained a significant predictor of maths ability, even after the influence of nonverbal IQ had been accounted for. These results suggest that fine motor skills should have a pivotal role in educational interventions designed to support the development of early mathematical skills.
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
44. Understanding how educational maths apps can enhance learning: A content analysis and qualitative comparative analysis
- Author
-
Outhwaite, Laura A., Early, Erin, Herodotou, Christothea, Van Herwegen, Jo, Outhwaite, Laura A., Early, Erin, Herodotou, Christothea, and Van Herwegen, Jo
- Abstract
Educational applications (apps) are ubiquitous within children's learning environments and emerging evidence has demonstrated their efficacy. However, it remains unclear what the active ingredients (ie, mechanisms), or combination of ingredients, of successful maths apps are. The current study developed a new, open‐access, three‐step framework for assessing the educational value of maths apps, comprised of type of app, mathematical content and app design features. When applied to a selection of available maths apps previously evaluated with children in the first 3 years of school (the final sample included 23 apps), results showed that practice‐based apps were the most common app type tested (n = 15). Basic number skills, such as number representation and relationships, were the most common area of mathematics targeted by apps (n = 21). A follow‐up qualitative comparative analysis showed observed learning outcomes with maths apps were enhanced when apps combined the following: a scaffolded and personalised learning journey (programmatic levelling) and explanations of why answers were right or wrong (explanatory feedback), as well as praise, such as ‘Great job!’ (motivational feedback). This novel evidence stresses the significance of feedback and levelling design features that teaching practitioners and other stakeholders should consider when deciding which apps to use with young children. Directions for future research are discussed.
45. Raising early achievement in math with interactive apps: a randomized control trial
- Author
-
Outhwaite, Laura A., Faulder, Marc, Gulliford, Anthea, Pitchford, Nicola J., Outhwaite, Laura A., Faulder, Marc, Gulliford, Anthea, and Pitchford, Nicola J.
- Abstract
Improving provision and raising achievement in early math for young children is of national importance. Child-centered apps offer an opportunity to develop strong foundations in learning math as they deliver one-to-one instruction. Reported here is the first pupil-level randomized control trial in the United Kingdom of interactive math apps designed for early years education, with 389 children aged 4–5 years. The original and rigorous research design disentangled the impact of the math apps as a form of quality math instruction from additional exposure to math. It was predicted that using the apps would increase math achievement when implemented by teachers in addition to standard math activities (treatment) or instead of a regular small group-based math activity (time-equivalent treatment) compared with standard math practice only (control). After a 12-week intervention period, results showed significantly greater math learning gains for both forms of app implementation compared with standard math practice. The math apps supported targeted basic facts and concepts and generalized to higher-level math reasoning and problem solving skills. There were no significant differences between the 2 forms of math app implementation, suggesting the math apps can be implemented in a well-balanced curriculum. Features of the interactive apps, which are grounded in instructional psychology and combine aspects of direct instruction with play, may account for the observed learning gains. These novel results suggest that structured, content-rich, interactive apps can provide a vehicle for efficiently delivering high-quality math instruction for all pupils in a classroom context and can effectively raise achievement in early math.
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
46. Closing the gap: efficacy of a tablet intervention to support the development of early mathematical skills in UK primary school children
- Author
-
Outhwaite, Laura A., Gulliford, Anthea, Pitchford, Nicola J., Outhwaite, Laura A., Gulliford, Anthea, and Pitchford, Nicola J.
- Abstract
The efficacy of a hand-held tablet technology intervention with learner-centred interactive software aimed at supporting the development of early maths skills was evaluated in four studies conducted in three UK primary schools. Immediate and sustained gains in mathematics were determined by comparing maths performance before, immediately after, and 5-months after the intervention. The impact of the child's first language, socio-economic status and basic cognitive skills (non-verbal intelligence, memory, processing speed and receptive vocabulary) on learning gains was also explored. In total, 133 pupils aged 4–7 years took part. Class teachers implemented the maths intervention for a specified period of time. Results showed significant immediate and sustained learning gains following the intervention, particularly for children identified as low-achievers. No significant effect of child's first language or socio-economic status was found but children with weaker memory skills demonstrated stronger learning gains. Overall, these findings indicate that tablet technology can provide a form of individualised effective support for early maths development, when software is age appropriate and grounded in a well-designed curriculum. Apps that incorporate repetitive and interactive features might help to reduce cognitive task demands, which could be particularly beneficial to low-achievers and could help to close the gap in early maths attainment from the start of primary school.
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
47. Can touch screen tablets be used to assess cognitive and motor skills in early years primary school children? A cross-cultural study
- Author
-
Pitchford, Nicola J., Outhwaite, Laura A., Pitchford, Nicola J., and Outhwaite, Laura A.
- Abstract
Assessment of cognitive and motor functions is fundamental for developmental and neuropsychological profiling. Assessments are usually conducted on an individual basis, with a trained examiner, using standardized paper and pencil tests, and can take up to an hour or more to complete, depending on the nature of the test. This makes traditional standardized assessments of child development largely unsuitable for use in low-income countries. Touch screen tablets afford the opportunity to assess cognitive functions in groups of participants, with untrained administrators, with precision recording of responses, thus automating the assessment process. In turn, this enables cognitive profiling to be conducted in contexts where access to qualified examiners and standardized assessments are rarely available. As such, touch screen assessments could provide a means of assessing child development in both low- and high-income countries, which would afford cross-cultural comparisons to be made with the same assessment tool. However, before touch screen tablet assessments can be used for cognitive profiling in low-to-high-income countries they need to be shown to provide reliable and valid measures of performance. We report the development of a new touch screen tablet assessment of basic cognitive and motor functions for use with early years primary school children in low- and high-income countries. Measures of spatial intelligence, visual attention, short-term memory, working memory, manual processing speed, and manual coordination are included as well as mathematical knowledge. To investigate if this new touch screen assessment tool can be used for cross-cultural comparisons we administered it to a sample of children (N = 283) spanning standards 1–3 in a low-income country, Malawi, and a smaller sample of children (N = 70) from first year of formal schooling from a high-income country, the UK. Split-half reliability, test-retest reliability, face validity, convergent construct v
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
48. Fine motor skills predict maths ability better than they predict reading ability in the early primary school years
- Author
-
Pitchford, Nicola J., Papini, Chiara, Outhwaite, Laura A., Gulliford, Anthea, Pitchford, Nicola J., Papini, Chiara, Outhwaite, Laura A., and Gulliford, Anthea
- Abstract
Fine motor skills have long been recognised as an important foundation for development in other domains. However, more precise insights into the role of fine motor skills, and their relationships to other skills in mediating early educational achievements, are needed to support the development of optimal educational interventions. We explored concurrent relationships between two components of fine motor skills, Fine Motor Precision and Fine Motor Integration, and early reading and maths development in two studies with primary school children of low-to-mid socio-economic status in the U.K. Two key findings were revealed. First, despite being in the first two years of primary school education, significantly better performance was found in reading compared to maths across both studies. This may reflect the protective effects of recent national-level interventions to promote early literacy skills in young children in the U.K. that have not been similarly promoted for maths. Second, fine motor skills were a better predictor of early maths ability than they were of early reading ability. Hierarchical multiple regression revealed that fine motor skills did not significantly predict reading ability when verbal short-term memory was taken into account. In contrast, Fine Motor Integration remained a significant predictor of maths ability, even after the influence of nonverbal IQ had been accounted for. These results suggest that fine motor skills should have a pivotal role in educational interventions designed to support the development of early mathematical skills.
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. Should touch screen tablets be used to improve educational outcomes in primary school children in developing countries?
- Author
-
Hubber, Paula Jane, Outhwaite, Laura A., Chigeda, Antonie, McGrath, Simon, Hodgen, Jeremy, Pitchford, Nicola J., Hubber, Paula Jane, Outhwaite, Laura A., Chigeda, Antonie, McGrath, Simon, Hodgen, Jeremy, and Pitchford, Nicola J.
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
50. Raising early achievement in math with interactive apps: a randomized control trial
- Author
-
Outhwaite, Laura A., Faulder, Marc, Gulliford, Anthea, Pitchford, Nicola J., Outhwaite, Laura A., Faulder, Marc, Gulliford, Anthea, and Pitchford, Nicola J.
- Abstract
Improving provision and raising achievement in early math for young children is of national importance. Child-centered apps offer an opportunity to develop strong foundations in learning math as they deliver one-to-one instruction. Reported here is the first pupil-level randomized control trial in the United Kingdom of interactive math apps designed for early years education, with 389 children aged 4–5 years. The original and rigorous research design disentangled the impact of the math apps as a form of quality math instruction from additional exposure to math. It was predicted that using the apps would increase math achievement when implemented by teachers in addition to standard math activities (treatment) or instead of a regular small group-based math activity (time-equivalent treatment) compared with standard math practice only (control). After a 12-week intervention period, results showed significantly greater math learning gains for both forms of app implementation compared with standard math practice. The math apps supported targeted basic facts and concepts and generalized to higher-level math reasoning and problem solving skills. There were no significant differences between the 2 forms of math app implementation, suggesting the math apps can be implemented in a well-balanced curriculum. Features of the interactive apps, which are grounded in instructional psychology and combine aspects of direct instruction with play, may account for the observed learning gains. These novel results suggest that structured, content-rich, interactive apps can provide a vehicle for efficiently delivering high-quality math instruction for all pupils in a classroom context and can effectively raise achievement in early math.
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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