Math Abilities Among Children with Neurodevelopmental Difficulties: Understanding Cognitive Factors and Evaluating a Pilot Intervention

IF 3.3 4区 心理学 Q1 PSYCHOLOGY, EDUCATIONAL Canadian Journal of School Psychology Pub Date : 2024-08-08 DOI:10.1177/08295735241259061
Danielle Mattson, Kathryn Kryska, J. Pei, Claire D. Coles, Julie Kable, Molly Millians, G. Andrew, Damien Cormier, C. Rasmussen
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Abstract

Math development in children relies on several underlying cognitive functions, including executive functions (EF), working memory (WM), and visual-motor abilities, such as visual-motor integration (VMI). Understanding how these cognitive factors contribute to children’s math performance is critical to supporting math learning and long-term math success. The present quasi-experimental waitlist control study ( N = 28) aimed to (a) examine the unique contributions of EF, WM, and VMI to math abilities among children ages 5–8 years old with neurodevelopmental difficulties; (b) determine whether a math intervention (the Mathematics Interactive Learning Experience; MILE) that supports these cognitive processes was effective when modified to be delivered to small groups in a school setting, and (c) examine whether any participant characteristics, such as age or IQ, were correlated with post-intervention math score changes. At baseline, participants’ math scores were significantly below the normative mean in all math content areas ( ps < .01). EF, WM, and VMI were highly correlated with math ability; however, verbal WM was the only unique predictor of math ability in regressions analysis. Compared to a waitlist control group, children in the immediate MILE intervention group achieved significantly greater math gains overall. When all children who ultimately completed the intervention were considered together, significant improvement was observed in more than half of math content areas. Furthermore, at the individual level, 85.7% of participants showed reliable change in at least one math content area. Implications for supporting math learning in children with neurodevelopmental difficulties are discussed.
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神经发育障碍儿童的数学能力:了解认知因素并评估试点干预措施
儿童的数学发展依赖于几种潜在的认知功能,包括执行功能(EF)、工作记忆(WM)和视觉-运动能力,如视觉-运动整合(VMI)。了解这些认知因素如何影响儿童的数学成绩,对于支持数学学习和长期数学成功至关重要。本准实验性候补名单对照研究(N = 28)旨在:(a)研究 EF、WM 和 VMI 对 5-8 岁有神经发育障碍的儿童的数学能力的独特贡献;(b)确定支持这些认知过程的数学干预(数学互动学习体验;MILE)在学校环境中被修改为提供给小组时是否有效;以及(c)研究参与者的任何特征(如年龄或智商)是否与干预后的数学成绩变化相关。基线时,参与者在所有数学内容领域的数学成绩均明显低于常模平均值(PS < .01)。EF、WM 和 VMI 与数学能力高度相关;然而,在回归分析中,言语 WM 是唯一能预测数学能力的因素。与候补对照组相比,立即接受 MILE 干预的儿童在数学方面的整体进步明显更大。如果将所有最终完成干预的儿童放在一起考虑,可以观察到半数以上的数学内容领域都有显著提高。此外,在个人层面上,85.7% 的参与者在至少一个数学内容领域表现出可靠的变化。本文讨论了支持神经发育障碍儿童数学学习的意义。
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来源期刊
Canadian Journal of School Psychology
Canadian Journal of School Psychology PSYCHOLOGY, EDUCATIONAL-
CiteScore
4.30
自引率
0.00%
发文量
10
期刊介绍: The Canadian Journals of School Psychology (CJSP) is the official journal of the Canadian Association of School Psychologists and publishes papers focusing on the interface between psychology and education. Papers may reflect theory, research, and practice of psychology in education, as well as book and test reviews. The journal is aimed at practitioners, but is subscribed to by university libraries and individuals (i.e. psychologists). CJSP has become the major reference for practicing school psychologists and students in graduate educational and school psychology programs in Canada.
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