This is not the latest version of this Digital Research Object (DRO). The latest version can be found here!
Measuring Mature Number Sense: Comparing Brief Assessment Scores and Number Sense Strategies
Author(s) / Creator(s)
Kirkland, Patrick K.
Guang, Claire
Otuonye, Chineme
McNeil, Nicole M.
Abstract / Description
Students who exhibit mature number sense make sense of numbers and operations, use reasoning to notice patterns, and flexibly choose effective problem-solving strategies (McIntosh et al., 1997). Due to its dispositional nature, mature number sense is typically measured through in-depth interviews or tests of strategy usage. Yet, the lack of an efficient, rigorously developed measure has made it difficult to collect systematic, replicable evidence on students’ mature number sense. To address this, we developed a brief assessment of mature number sense. The present study provides additional convergent evidence of validity for this measure with US students in grades 3-8 (8–14 years old). We compared middle school (N = 40) and upper elementary school (N = 41) scores from the brief assessment with an established, time-intensive measure (Yang, 2019) and an in-depth interview of student strategy usage (Markovits & Sowder, 1994). We found strong correlations (r > 0.7) across all three measures, and this held even when controlling for students’ arithmetic scores (pr > 0.6). Researchers and educators can now use the brief assessment to investigate students’ mathematical thinking and advance knowledge of a key aspect of mathematical cognition.
Keyword(s)
'mature' number sense assessment convergent validity rational numbers problem-solving strategies fluencyPersistent Identifier
Date of first publication
2024-01-31
Journal title
Journal of Numerical Cognition
Publisher
PsychArchives
Publication status
acceptedVersion
Review status
reviewed
Is version of
Citation
Kirkland, P. K., Guang, C., Otuonye, C., & McNeil, N. M. (in press). Measuring mature number sense: Comparing brief assessment scores and number sense strategies [Accepted manuscript]. Journal of Numerical Cognition. https://doi.org/10.23668/psycharchives.14128
-
Kirkland_et_al_2024_Measuring_mature_number_sense_JNC_AAM.pdfAdobe PDF - 563.69KBMD5: e7986e78f87fed76d5e14daee86f8c49Description: Accepted Manuscript
-
22024-03-22During the review process, the title of the manuscript was changed to reflect the main finding of the studies.
-
12024-01-31
-
Author(s) / Creator(s)Kirkland, Patrick K.
-
Author(s) / Creator(s)Guang, Claire
-
Author(s) / Creator(s)Otuonye, Chineme
-
Author(s) / Creator(s)McNeil, Nicole M.
-
PsychArchives acquisition timestamp2024-01-31T12:37:37Z
-
Made available on2024-01-31T12:37:37Z
-
Date of first publication2024-01-31
-
Abstract / DescriptionStudents who exhibit mature number sense make sense of numbers and operations, use reasoning to notice patterns, and flexibly choose effective problem-solving strategies (McIntosh et al., 1997). Due to its dispositional nature, mature number sense is typically measured through in-depth interviews or tests of strategy usage. Yet, the lack of an efficient, rigorously developed measure has made it difficult to collect systematic, replicable evidence on students’ mature number sense. To address this, we developed a brief assessment of mature number sense. The present study provides additional convergent evidence of validity for this measure with US students in grades 3-8 (8–14 years old). We compared middle school (N = 40) and upper elementary school (N = 41) scores from the brief assessment with an established, time-intensive measure (Yang, 2019) and an in-depth interview of student strategy usage (Markovits & Sowder, 1994). We found strong correlations (r > 0.7) across all three measures, and this held even when controlling for students’ arithmetic scores (pr > 0.6). Researchers and educators can now use the brief assessment to investigate students’ mathematical thinking and advance knowledge of a key aspect of mathematical cognition.en
-
Publication statusacceptedVersion
-
Review statusreviewed
-
SponsorshipThis research was supported by the National Science Foundation under grant DRL EHR 2100214.
-
CitationKirkland, P. K., Guang, C., Otuonye, C., & McNeil, N. M. (in press). Measuring mature number sense: Comparing brief assessment scores and number sense strategies [Accepted manuscript]. Journal of Numerical Cognition. https://doi.org/10.23668/psycharchives.14128
-
ISSN2363-8761
-
Persistent Identifierhttps://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12034/9593
-
Persistent Identifierhttps://doi.org/10.23668/psycharchives.14128
-
Language of contenteng
-
PublisherPsychArchives
-
Is version ofhttps://doi.org/10.5964/jnc.12679
-
Keyword(s)'mature' number sense
-
Keyword(s)assessment
-
Keyword(s)convergent validity
-
Keyword(s)rational numbers
-
Keyword(s)problem-solving strategies
-
Keyword(s)fluency
-
Dewey Decimal Classification number(s)150
-
TitleMeasuring Mature Number Sense: Comparing Brief Assessment Scores and Number Sense Strategiesen
-
DRO typearticle
-
Journal titleJournal of Numerical Cognition
-
Visible tag(s)PsychOpen GOLD
-
Visible tag(s)Accepted Manuscript