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This volume focuses on two related questions that are central to
both the psychology of mathematical thinking and learning and to
the improvement of mathematics education:
What is the nature of arithmetic expertise?
How can instruction best promote it?
Contributors from a variety of specialities, including cognitive,
developmental, educational, and neurological psychology;
mathematics education; and special education offer theoretical
perspectives and much needed empirical evidence about these issues.
As reported in this volume, both theory and research indicate that
the nature of arithmetic expertise and how to best promote it are
far more complex than conventional wisdom and many scholars, past
and present, have suggested. The results of psychological,
educational, and clinical studies using a wide range of arithmetic
tasks and populations (including "normally" and atypically
developing children, non-injured and brain-injured adults, and
savants) all point to the same conclusion: The heart of arithmetic
fluency, in general, and the flexible and creative use of
strategies, in particular, is what is termed "adaptive expertise"
(meaningful or conceptually based knowledge). The construction of
adaptive expertise in mathematics is, for the first time, examined
across various arithmetic topics and age groups.
This book will be an invaluable resource for researchers and
graduate students interested in mathematical cognition and learning
(including mathematics educators, developmental and educational
psychologists, and neuropsychologists), educators (including
teachers, curriculum supervisors, and school administrators), and
others interested in improving arithmetic instruction (including
officials in national and local education departments, the media,
and parents).
This volume focuses on two related questions that are central to
both the psychology of mathematical thinking and learning and to
the improvement of mathematics education:
What is the nature of arithmetic expertise?
How can instruction best promote it?
Contributors from a variety of specialities, including cognitive,
developmental, educational, and neurological psychology;
mathematics education; and special education offer theoretical
perspectives and much needed empirical evidence about these issues.
As reported in this volume, both theory and research indicate that
the nature of arithmetic expertise and how to best promote it are
far more complex than conventional wisdom and many scholars, past
and present, have suggested. The results of psychological,
educational, and clinical studies using a wide range of arithmetic
tasks and populations (including "normally" and atypically
developing children, non-injured and brain-injured adults, and
savants) all point to the same conclusion: The heart of arithmetic
fluency, in general, and the flexible and creative use of
strategies, in particular, is what is termed "adaptive expertise"
(meaningful or conceptually based knowledge). The construction of
adaptive expertise in mathematics is, for the first time, examined
across various arithmetic topics and age groups.
This book will be an invaluable resource for researchers and
graduate students interested in mathematical cognition and learning
(including mathematics educators, developmental and educational
psychologists, and neuropsychologists), educators (including
teachers, curriculum supervisors, and school administrators), and
others interested in improving arithmetic instruction (including
officials in national and local education departments, the media,
and parents).
Exploring the investigative approach to mathematics as set forth by
the NCTM, this volume encourages critical thinking about
mathematics instruction. Ideal for mathematics educators, the book
uses an interactive format to stimulate a deeper understanding
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