Children's Intuitive Mathematics: The Development of Knowledge About Nonlinear Growth
- 1 January 2007
- journal article
- Published by Wiley in Child Development
- Vol. 78 (1) , 296-308
- https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1467-8624.2007.00998.x
Abstract
This study is concerned with the development of children's intuitive understanding of nonlinear processes. The ability to estimate linear and exponential growth was examined in 7-, 9-, 11-, and 13-year-old children and adults (N=160). Whereas linear growth was judged correctly at all ages, estimations of exponential growth were in line with mathematically correct values only in 13-year-olds and adults. However, 9-year-olds already judged the result of exponential growth as being significantly higher than that of linear growth, and even a remarkable proportion of 7-year-olds showed such discrimination between the two types of functions. Results point to the existence of an early intuitive knowledge about the characteristics of nonlinear growth, long before those functions are taught in school.Keywords
This publication has 30 references indexed in Scilit:
- Not Everything Is Proportional: Effects of Age and Problem Type on Propensities for OvergeneralizationCognition and Instruction, 2005
- How to speed up to be in time: Action-judgment dissociations in children and adultsSwiss Journal of Psychology, 2004
- Toddlers’ cognition of adding and subtracting objects in action and in perceptionCognitive Development, 2003
- Judgment and action knowledge in speed adjustment tasks: experiments in a virtual environmentDevelopmental Science, 2003
- Changes in executive control across the life span: Examination of task-switching performance.Developmental Psychology, 2001
- Exponential functions, rates of change, and the multiplicative unitEducational Studies in Mathematics, 1994
- Intuitive physics in action and judgment: The development of knowledge about projectile motion.Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition, 1993
- Integrating velocity, time, and distance information: A developmental studyCognitive Psychology, 1981
- Inverse statistics and misperception of exponential growthPerception & Psychophysics, 1977
- Misperception of exponential growthPerception & Psychophysics, 1975