Title: Developing Arithmetical Skills
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- Developing Arithmetical Skills
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3Informal Arithmetic
- Piaget(1965) children did not have a conceptual
understanding of basic arithmetic until the age
of 7 or 8 years
Asked On which day they get to eat most of the
candies?
Day 1 4 4 candies Day 2 1 7 candies
Ans ___________________
4Can you see that the numbers of candies in the 2
rows are equal?
For 1st day afternoon
For 1st morning
Which day will you get to eat the cadies?
For 2nd day morning
For 2nd day afternoon
52nd day, because the group of 7 is more.
The same.
7 gt4, but 4gt1
6Piaget A major conceptual knowledge of
arithmetic required an understanding that numbers
are composed of groups of smaller numbers and
that a variety of different combinations can
result in the same quantity.
Even 5-year-old cannot arrange 2 rows of beads (8
14) as equal numbers
Arithmetic conceptual knowledge develop at later
stage of development?
7Children have considerable informal knowledge
(Starkey et al)
- 24-month-olds child was able to represent and
remember the number of balls (1,2,3) deposited
and use this representation to guide her search
(p.8) - 36-month-olds able to represent and remember
numerosities up to and including 4, ( not through
counting). - 18-month-old and nearly 2-year-olds, understand
the addition increases the numerosity of a set
substraction decreases a set.(p.9)
Humans have a fundamental sense of number and
quantity, addition and subtraction, independent
of language system.
85 balls put into the box by the children
One ball taken out by the researcher
Children take out the balls, look for the 5th
ball.
95 balls put into the box by the children
One ball put in by the researcher
Children look for the 6th ball?
10Childrens Early Arithmetic Knowledge
- Young Children, even infants, have a fundamental
understanding that addition and subtraction
influence quantity - Early implicit knowledge limited to quantities up
to and including three items and is accomplished
nonverbally. - By 4 or 5, most children use verbal counting in
situations requiring and -.
11Arithmetic Knowledge
- Commutativity
- Base 10 Knowledge
- Fractions
12Commutativity ???
- What is commutativity
- Do Children understand commutativity? When? How
(Taught or induced)
13Solving 136 and then 613
- 72 of the first grade and 83 of the second- and
third-grade consistently (at least 3 or the
trials) solve without counting - first-grade children had not been explicitly
taught commutativity - 40 kindergarten children understand
commutativity. - Induced by noting the outcome of basic addition.
14Base-10 Knowledge
- Why is base-10 system important
- understand multi-digit numbers
- regrouping in addition
- carrying and borrowing
- How to teach Base-10 knowledge
- concrete representation versus rote-learning
15Fractions
- Why is the concept of fraction difficult to
grasp? - 1/5 1/6 -gt 2/11
- 1/3 gt 1/2
- Not encountered in daily life?
- Do not have intuitive understanding
- Internal knowledge of counting and addition
required?
16Arithmetic Operations
- Addition
- Simple Addition
- Complex Addition
- Subtraction
- Simple Subtraction
- Complex Subtraction
- Multiplication
- Simple Multiplication
- Complex Multiplication
- Division
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18Addition
- What strategies
- manipulative
- finger counting
- verbal counting without the use of manipulations
(mentally) - derived facts
- fact retrieval
19Manipulations
- What procedures involved?
- Sets of objects represent numbers to be counted
- pointing to the objects during counting
20Finger Counting
- How
- Advantage over Manipulatives
- What difficulties involved (abstraction)
21Verbal Counting
- Difficulties mentally keep tract of number
counted and number not counted. - Strategies
- counting all (sum)
- counting from the 1st number (first) - a short
cut - counting from the larger no. (min) -
understanding the commutative law. - Strategies seem to be self-discovered.
22Derived Facts (Decompositions)
- 67 -gt 661
- 85 -gt 23
- own constructed
23Fact Retrieval
- Remembered
- smaller numbers easier (why?)
- problem size effect
- found in , -, x
- the larger the number is in the problem, the
slower and more error-prone the retrieval (why?) - some addition facts, like n0n seems to be
retrieved from the long-term memory.
24Errors
- Wild guess e.g., 4141
- Near Misses 1 or 2 higher than the correct sum,
mirroring childs earlier counting error. - Operation confusion correct answer of an
analogous problem with a diff. Arith. Operations,
e.g., 43 -gt 12 - table errors retrieving answers to related
problems, e.g., 67 -gt 12 (57)
25Complex Addition
- Skills involved
- counting
- decomposition regrouping
- columnwise procedure
- trading (carrying)
- difficulties encountered
- mentally note a trade has been taken
- understanding of place value
26Errors in Complex Addition
(A) 46 58 ------------ 94
(B) 46 58 ------------ 914
(C) 22 64 ------------ 96
27Subtraction (see Table 2.2, page 72)
- Common Strategies
- manipulatives
- separating from
- addition on
- matching
- Counting fingers
- verbal counting
- counting up
- counting down
- Retrieval
28Complex Subtraction (see Table 2.2, page 72)
- Verbal counting
- Counting down
- Decompositions
- Down over the ten
- Take from the ten
- Delete 10s rule
- Columnar retrieval
29Multiplication Strategies
- Repeated addition 5x3 555
- counting by n 5 x3 counted as 5, 10, 15
- rule 5X0 0
- derived facts (decomposing) 5X6 5X55
- fact retrieval