Rahmenprogramm des BMBF zur Förderung der empirischen Bildungsforschung

Literaturdatenbank

Vollanzeige

    Pfeil auf den Link... Verfügbarkeit 
Autoren Heine, Angela; Thaler, Verena; Tamm, Sascha; Hawelka, Stefan; Schneider, Michael; Torbeyns, Joke; De Smedt, Bert; Verschaffel, Lieven; Stern, Elsbeth; Jacobs, Arthur M.  
Titel What the eyes already ‘know’. Using eye movement measurement to tap into children’s implicit numerical magnitude representations.  
URL https://doi.org/10.1002/icd.640  
URN, persistent 10.1002/icd.640  
Erscheinungsjahr 2009, Jg. 19, H. 2  
Seitenzahl S. 175-186  
Zeitschrift Infant and Child Development  
ISSN 1522-7227; 1522-7219  
Dokumenttyp Zeitschriftenaufsatz; gedruckt; online  
Beigaben Literaturangaben, Abbildungen  
Sprache englisch  
Forschungsschwerpunkt Lehr-Lern-Forschung unter neurowissenschaftlicher Perspektive  
Schlagwörter Augenbewegung; Kognitive Entwicklung; Kognitives Lernen; Problemlösen; Nonverbale Kommunikation; Grundschule; Schüler; Messverfahren; Kognitiver Prozess; Implizites Wissen; Experiment  
Abstract To date, a number of studies have demonstrated the existence of mismatches between children’s implicit and explicit knowledge at certain points in development that become manifest by their gestures and gaze orientation in different problem solving contexts. Stimulated by this research, we used eye movement measurement to investigate the development of basic knowledge about numerical magnitude in primary school children. Sixty‐six children from grades one to three (i.e. 6–9 years) were presented with two parallel versions of a number line estimation task of which one was restricted to behavioural measures, whereas the other included the recording of eye movement data. The results of the eye movement experiment indicate a quantitative increase as well as a qualitative change in children’s implicit knowledge about numerical magnitudes in this age group that precedes the overt, that is, behavioural, demonstration of explicit numerical knowledge. The finding that children’s eye movements reveal substantially more about the presence of implicit precursors of later explicit knowledge in the numerical domain than classical approaches suggests further exploration of eye movement measurement as a potential early assessment tool of individual achievement levels in numerical processing. (Orig.).  
Projekt Einfluss visuo-spatialer Defizite auf Entwicklung der Rechenschwäche bei Kindern
 
Förderkennzeichen 01GJ0601