Costa, HM;
Nicholson, B;
Donlan, C;
Van Herwegen, J;
(2018)
Low performance on mathematical tasks in preschoolers: the importance of domain-general and domain-specific abilities.
Journal of Intellectual Disability Research
, 62
(4)
pp. 292-302.
10.1111/jir.12465.
Preview |
Text
Donlan_ Nicholson Donlan Van Herwegen 2017.pdf - Accepted Version Download (537kB) | Preview |
Abstract
Background: Different domain‐specific and domain‐general cognitive precursors play a key role in the development of mathematical abilities. The contribution of these domains to mathematical ability changes during development. Primary school‐aged children who show mathematical difficulties form a heterogeneous group, but it is not clear whether this also holds for preschool low achievers (LAs) and how domain‐specific and domain‐general abilities contribute to mathematical difficulties at a young age. The aim of this study was to explore the cognitive characteristics of a sample of preschool LAs and identify sub‐types of LAs. Methods: 81 children were identified as LAs from 283 preschoolers aged 3 to 5 years old and were assessed on a number of domain‐general and domain‐specific tasks. Results: Cluster analysis revealed four subgroups of LAs in mathematics: (1) a weak processing sub‐type; (2) a general mathematical LAs sub‐type; (3) a mixed abilities sub‐type; and (4) a visuo‐spatial deficit sub‐type. Whilst two of the groups showed specific domain‐general difficulties, none showed only domain‐specific difficulties. Conclusions: Current findings suggest that preschool LAs constitute a heterogeneous group and stress the importance of domain‐general factors for the development of mathematical abilities during the preschool years.
Archive Staff Only
View Item |