2018
DOI: 10.1037/dev0000469
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How high can you count? Probing the limits of children’s counting.

Abstract: While much research has focused on understanding the process by which young children learn to count, little work has explored the effects of direct instruction on this process. In the current study, we explored the impacts of training children in an explicit counting procedure on two distinct cardinality tasks. Two- to 5-year-old children first participated in a Give-N task in which counting proficiency was assessed, and then participated in a short instruction session where explicit counting was modeled and e… Show more

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Cited by 16 publications
(31 citation statements)
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“…Our findings add to a growing literature suggesting that children have knowledge of number words outside of their knower-level (e.g., Huang et al, 2010 ; Posid and Cordes, 2018 ; Wagner et al, 2019 ; O’Rear et al, 2020 ). The nuances in number knowledge that the Point-to-X task captures may allow researchers to understand the mechanism for acquiring number words.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 75%
“…Our findings add to a growing literature suggesting that children have knowledge of number words outside of their knower-level (e.g., Huang et al, 2010 ; Posid and Cordes, 2018 ; Wagner et al, 2019 ; O’Rear et al, 2020 ). The nuances in number knowledge that the Point-to-X task captures may allow researchers to understand the mechanism for acquiring number words.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 75%
“…Finally, a part of the divergences reported between studies could certainly be attributed to more or less subtle differences in the instructions. Some versions of the GaN task include a follow-up question after the child has responded while others do not (Krajcsi et al, 2018;Mussolin et al, 2012;Posid & Cordes, 2018;Wagner & Johnson, 2011). Moreover, the follow-up question itself could take different forms with potentially different effects on the performance.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Gibson and colleagues argue that this finding shows that number-talk, that is, directed to the child's knower-level, or level directly above, is most beneficial for children's learning (Gibson et al, 2020). This, and other training studies (Gibson et al, 2020;Mix et al, 2012;O'Rear & McNeil, 2019;Posid & Cordes, 2018), shows that language experience, in the form of hearing number words used to count and label sets of objects, has a significant causal impact on children's developing number knowledge.…”
Section: Research Highlightsmentioning
confidence: 96%
“…Training studies add further support to the role of specific number related language experiences, in the form of language input from caregivers, in learning about natural numbers (Gibson et al., 2020; Mix et al., 2012; O'Rear & McNeil, 2019; Posid & Cordes, 2018). Gibson et al.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 96%