Carnegie Mellon University
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Relations of different types of numerical magnitude representations to each other and to mathematics achievement.

journal contribution
posted on 2014-07-01, 00:00 authored by Lisa K. Fazio, Drew H. Bailey, Clarissa A. Thompson, Robert SieglerRobert Siegler

We examined relations between symbolic and non-symbolic numerical magnitude representations, between whole number and fraction representations, and between these representations and overall mathematics achievement in fifth graders. Fraction and whole number symbolic and non-symbolic numerical magnitude understandings were measured using both magnitude comparison and number line estimation tasks. After controlling for non-mathematical cognitive proficiency, both symbolic and non-symbolic numerical magnitude understandings were uniquely related to mathematics achievement, but the relation was much stronger for symbolic numbers. A meta-analysis of 19 published studies indicated that relations between non-symbolic numerical magnitude knowledge and mathematics achievement are present but tend to be weak, especially beyond 6 years of age.

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2014-07-01

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