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Investigating Children’s Abilities to Count and Make Quantitative Comparisons

Joohi Lee, ShamAh Md-Yunus

Producción científicarevisión exhaustiva

Resumen

This study was designed to investigate children’s

abilities to count and make quantitative comparisons.

In addition, this study utilized reasoning questions

(i.e., how did you know?). Thirty-four preschoolers, mean

age 4.5 years old, participated in the study. According to

the results, 89 % of the children (n = 30) were able to do

rote counting and 70 % (n = 24) were able to do rational

counting. When children were asked how they knew how

many objects were in a set, 30 responded that they used a

counting strategy. Sixty-five percent of children (n = 22)

answered ‘‘zero’’ when no block was given and 21 children

answered ‘‘nothing’’ when they were asked what zero

meant to them. About quantitative comparisons, 65 % of

children (n = 22) answered correctly when they were

asked more and less questions.

Idioma originalAmerican English
PublicaciónDefault journal
EstadoPublished - may 1 2015

Disciplines

  • Education
  • Elementary Education and Teaching
  • Pre-Elementary, Early Childhood, Kindergarten Teacher Education

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