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The Origins of Mathematical Knowledge in Childhood Catherine Sophian

The Origins of Mathematical Knowledge in Childhood By Catherine Sophian

The Origins of Mathematical Knowledge in Childhood by Catherine Sophian


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The Origins of Mathematical Knowledge in Childhood Summary

The Origins of Mathematical Knowledge in Childhood by Catherine Sophian

This book examines the origins and development of children's mathematical knowledge. It contrasts the widely held view that counting is the starting point for mathematical development with an alternative comparison-of-quantities position. According to the comparison-of-quantities position, the concept of number builds upon more basic concepts of equality, inequality, and less-than and greater-than relations, which derive from comparisons between unenumerated quantities such as lengths. The concept of number combines these basic comparative concepts with the concept of a unit of measure, which allows one quantity to be described as a multiple of another. Sophian examines these alternative accounts of children's developing mathematical knowledge in the light of research: on children's counting; on their reasoning about continuous quantities such as length and area; on the development of the concept of unit; on additive and multiplicative reasoning; and on knowledge about fractions. In the closing chapters, Sophian draws out the developmental and the educational implications of the research and theory presented. Developmentally, the comparison-of-quantities position undermines the idea that numerical knowledge develops through domain-specific learning mechanisms in that it links numerical development both to physical knowledge about objects, which is the starting point for the concept of unit, and to the acquisition of linguistic number terms. Instructionally, the comparison-of-quantities perspective diverges from the counting-first perspective in that it underscores the continuity between whole-number arithmetic and fraction learning that stems from the importance of the concept of unit for both. Building on this idea, Sophian advances three instructional recommendations: First, instruction about numbers should always be grounded in thinking about quantities and how numbers represent the relations between them; second, instruction in the early years should always be guided by a long-term perspective in which current objectives are shaped by an understanding of their role in the overall course of mathematics learning; and third, instruction should be directly toward promoting the acquisition of the most general mathematical knowledge possible. The Origins of Mathematical Knowledge in Childhood is intended for researchers, professionals, and graduate students in developmental psychology, educational psychology, and mathematics education, and as a supplementary text for advanced undergraduate courses in cognitive development, educational psychology, and mathematics education.

The Origins of Mathematical Knowledge in Childhood Reviews

Sophian presents a tautly reasoned and compelling challenge to schooling-as-usual, that is, to instruction that takes counting as the basis for teaching children arithmetic... She argues for highlighting the unit as the foundation of mathematics instruction [and] goes on to trace the implications of unit not only for instruction on conventional topics, such as rational number, multiplication, and division, but also for a wider mathematics education that knits number, measure, data, and geometry.-Richard Lehrer
Vanderbilt University

Sophian does a masterful job of organizing and presenting one of the major success stories of developmental and educational research - understanding the developmental roots of mathematical competence.... This book will interest and benefit both those interested in understanding children's cognitive development and those interested in developing ways of promoting mathematical competence. Sophian's research has contributed greatly to our understanding of both aspects of mathematical development; her book provides a timely and accessible introduction to the state of the art in research on children's mathematical development.
-
Kevin Miller
University of Michigan


Sophian presents a tautly reasoned and compelling challenge to schooling-as-usual, that is, to instruction that takes counting as the basis for teaching children arithmetic... She argues for highlighting the unit as the foundation of mathematics instruction [and] goes on to trace the implications of unit not only for instruction on conventional topics, such as rational number, multiplication, and division, but also for a wider mathematics education that knits number, measure, data, and geometry.
-Richard Lehrer
Vanderbilt University

Sophian does a masterful job of organizing and presenting one of the major success stories of developmental and educational research - understanding the developmental roots of mathematical competence.... This book will interest and benefit both those interested in understanding children's cognitive development and those interested in developing ways of promoting mathematical competence. Sophian's research has contributed greatly to our understanding of both aspects of mathematical development; her book provides a timely and accessible introduction to the state of the art in research on children's mathematical development.
-Kevin Miller
University of Michigan

About Catherine Sophian

Sophian, Catherine

Table of Contents

Contents: Preface. Cognitive Development and Mathematics Learning. Children's Counting. Quantitative Comparison Without Numbers. Understanding Units. Relations Among Quantities in Arithmetic: Additive and Multiplicative Reasoning. Understanding Fractions. Implications for Developmental Psychology. Implications for Mathematics Education.

Additional information

NLS9780415877701
9780415877701
0415877709
The Origins of Mathematical Knowledge in Childhood by Catherine Sophian
New
Paperback
Taylor & Francis Ltd
2009-12-10
214
N/A
Book picture is for illustrative purposes only, actual binding, cover or edition may vary.
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