Mathematical abilities of children with specific language impairment: a 2-year follow-up.

B B Fazio
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引用次数: 92

Abstract

A 2-year follow-up of the mathematical abilities of young children with specific language impairment (SLI) is reported. To detect the nature of the difficulties children with SLI exhibited in mathematics, the first- and second-grade children's performance was compared to mental age and language age comparison groups of typically developing children on a series of tasks that examined conceptual, procedural, and declarative knowledge of mathematics. Despite displaying knowledge of many conceptual aspects of mathematics such as counting plates of cookies to decide which plate had "more," children with SLI displayed marked difficulty with declarative mathematical knowledge that required an immediate response such as rote counting to fifty, counting by 10's, reciting numerals backwards from 20, and addition facts such as 2 + 2 =?. Moreover, children with SLI performed similarly to their cognitive peers on mathematical tasks that allowed children to use actual objects to count and on math problems that did not require them to exceed the sequence of numbers that they knew well. These findings offer further evidence that storage and/or retrieval of rote sequential material is particularly cumbersome for children with SLI.

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特殊语言障碍儿童的数学能力:2年随访。
本文对特殊语言障碍儿童的数学能力进行了为期2年的随访。为了检测特殊语言障碍儿童在数学方面表现出的困难的性质,我们将一年级和二年级儿童在一系列测试数学概念、程序和陈述知识的任务上的表现与正常发展儿童的心理年龄和语言年龄对照组进行了比较。尽管表现出了许多数学概念方面的知识,比如数饼干盘子来决定哪个盘子“更多”,但患有特殊语言障碍的儿童在需要立即反应的陈述性数学知识方面表现出明显的困难,比如死记硬背到50,从10开始数,从20开始背数字,以及加法,比如2 + 2 =?此外,患有特殊语言障碍的孩子在数学任务上的表现与认知能力强的同龄人相似,这些任务允许孩子使用实际物体来计算,也不需要他们超越自己熟悉的数字序列。这些发现提供了进一步的证据表明,对于患有特殊语言障碍的儿童来说,死记硬背的顺序材料的存储和/或检索特别麻烦。
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