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Children’s reasoning about decimals and its relation to fraction learning and mathematics achievement

Authors :
Ilyse Resnick
Nancy C. Jordan
Luke Rinne
Christina Barbieri
Source :
Journal of Educational Psychology. 111:604-618
Publication Year :
2019
Publisher :
American Psychological Association (APA), 2019.

Abstract

Reasoning about numerical magnitudes is a key aspect of mathematics learning. Most research examining the relation of magnitude understanding to general mathematics achievement has focused on whole number and fraction magnitudes. The present longitudinal study (N = 435) used a 3-step latent class analysis to examine reasoning about magnitudes on a decimal comparison task in 4th grade, before systematic decimals instruction. Three classes of response patterns were identified, indicating empirically distinct levels of decimal magnitude understanding. Class 1 students consistently gave correct responses, suggesting that they understood decimal properties even before systematic decimal instruction. Class 2 students were accurate when a 0 immediately followed the decimal, but were inaccurate when a zero was added to the end of the decimal string, suggesting a partial understanding of place value; their performance was also negatively influenced by a whole number bias. Class 3 students showed misunderstanding of both place value and a whole number bias. Class membership accurately predicted 6th grade mathematics achievement, after controlling for whole number and fraction magnitude understanding as well as demographic and cognitive factors. Taken together, the findings suggest students may benefit from instruction that emphasizes decimal properties earlier in school. (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2019 APA, all rights reserved)

Details

ISSN :
19392176 and 00220663
Volume :
111
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of Educational Psychology
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........5b255595d2b3ada660af5bb21db0a3c8