|      We know a lot    about how babies learn to talk, and youngsters learn to read. Now scientists    are unraveling the earliest building blocks of math — and what children know    about numbers as they begin first grade seems to play a big role in how well    they do everyday calculations later on. The findings have    specialists considering steps that parents might take to spur math abilities,    just like they do to try to raise a good reader. This isn't only about    trying to improve the nation's math scores and attract kids to become    engineers. It's far more basic. Consider: How rapidly can    you calculate a tip? Do the fractions to double a recipe? Know how many    quarters and dimes the cashier should hand back as your change? About 1 in 5 adults in    the U.S. lacks the math competence expected of a middle-schooler, meaning    they have trouble with those ordinary tasks and aren't qualified for many of    today's jobs. "It's not just, can    you do well in school? It's how well can you do in your life," says Dr. Kathy Mann Koepke of the National    Institutes of Health, which is funding much of this research into math    cognition. "We are in the midst of math all the time." A new study shows trouble    can start early. University of Missouri    researchers tested 180 seventh-graders. Those who lagged behind their peers    in a test of core math skills needed to function as adults were the same kids    who'd had the least number sense or fluency way    back when they started first grade. "The gap they    started with, they don't close it," says Dr. David    Geary, a cognitive psychologist who leads the study that is tracking    children from kindergarten to high school in the Columbia, Mo., school    system. "They're not catching up" to the kids who started ahead. If first grade sounds    pretty young to be predicting math ability, well, no one expects tots to be    scribbling sums. But this number sense, or what Geary more precisely terms "number system knowledge," turns out to be a    fundamental skill that students continually build on, much more than the    simple ability to count. What's involved?    Understanding that numbers represent different quantities — that three dots    is the same as the numeral "3'' or the word "three." Grasping    magnitude — that 23 is bigger than 17. Getting the concept that numbers can    be broken into parts — that 5 is the same as 2 and 3, or 4 and 1. Showing on    a number line that the difference between 10    and 12 is the same as the difference between 20 and 22. Factors such as IQ and    attention span didn't explain why some first-graders did better than others.    Now Geary is studying if something that youngsters learn in preschool offers    an advantage. There's other evidence    that math matters early in life. Numerous studies with young babies and a    variety of animals show that a related ability — to estimate numbers without    counting — is intuitive, sort of hard-wired in the brain, says Mann Koepke, of NIH's National Institute of Child    Health and Human Development. That's the ability that lets you choose the    shortest grocery check-out line at a glance, or that guides a bird to the    bush with the most berries. Number system knowledge    is more sophisticated, and the Missouri study shows children who start    elementary school without those concepts "seem to struggle    enormously," says Mann Koepke, who wasn't part of that research. While schools tend to    focus on math problems around third grade, and math learning disabilities    often are diagnosed by fifth grade, the new findings suggest "the need    to intervene is much earlier than we ever used to think," she adds. Exactly how to intervene    still is being studied, sure to be a topic when NIH brings experts together    this spring to assess what's known about math cognition. But Geary sees a strong    parallel with reading. Scientists have long known that preschoolers who know    the names of letters and can better distinguish what sounds those letters    make go on to read more easily. So parents today are advised to read to their    children from birth, and many youngsters' books use rhyming to focus on    sounds. Likewise for math,    "kids need to know number words" early on, he says. NIH's Mann Koepke agrees,    and offers some tips: —Don't teach your toddler    to count solely by reciting numbers. Attach numbers to a noun — "Here    are five crayons: One crayon, two crayons..." or say "I need to buy    two yogurts" as you pick them from the store shelf — so they'll absorb    the quantity concept. —Talk about distance: How    many steps to your ball? The swing is farther away; it takes more steps. —Describe shapes: The    ellipse is round like a circle but flatter. —As they grow, show    children how math is part of daily life, as you make change, or measure    ingredients, or decide how soon to leave for a destination 10 miles away, "We should be    talking to our children about magnitude, numbers, distance, shapes as soon as    they're born," she contends. "More than likely, this is a positive    influence on their brain function."  |    
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