The effect of physical manipulation on children's numerical strategies: evaluating the potential for tangible technology

Despite their prevalence in early years’ education, there seems to be a lack of agreement over how or indeed whether physical objects support children's learning. Understanding the role of physically manipulating representations has gained impetus with the increasing potential to integrate digi...

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Main Author: Manches, A.D.
Format: Thesis (University of Nottingham only)
Language:English
Published: 2010
Subjects:
Online Access:https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/11372/
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author Manches, A.D.
author_facet Manches, A.D.
author_sort Manches, A.D.
building Nottingham Research Data Repository
collection Online Access
description Despite their prevalence in early years’ education, there seems to be a lack of agreement over how or indeed whether physical objects support children's learning. Understanding the role of physically manipulating representations has gained impetus with the increasing potential to integrate digital technology into physical objects: tangible technology. This thesis aimed to evaluate the potential for tangible technologies to support numerical development by examining young children’s (4-8 years) use of physical objects in a numerical task. This task required them to find all the different ways in which a number (e.g., 7) can be decomposed (e.g., into 2 & 5). Seven carefully designed studies compared children’s numerical strategies using physical objects (cubes) with other materials (paper/virtual representations) or no materials. The studies showed that physical objects not only helped children identify solutions through simple physical actions, but fostered strategies that related solutions such as swapping groups of cubes or moving just one cube to get a new solution. This led to predictions about how a computer might influence strategies by constraining children’s actions to moving just one object at a time using the mouse. These predictions were confirmed, and a further study showed how using materials that changed colour according to the number grouped could support strategies by drawing children’s attention to numerical changes. The research showed that, to help children identify ways to break down a number efficiently, it was more effective to constrain their actions using a graphical, rather than tangible, interface. However, when multiple (physical) objects could be manipulated, children were able to constrain their own actions and used a wider range of strategies. Although moving multiple objects can be facilitated through interfaces such as tabletop computers, this research indicated certain cognitive benefits of physically manipulating representations for children’s numerical development that may inform tangible designs.
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spelling nottingham-113722025-02-28T11:13:01Z https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/11372/ The effect of physical manipulation on children's numerical strategies: evaluating the potential for tangible technology Manches, A.D. Despite their prevalence in early years’ education, there seems to be a lack of agreement over how or indeed whether physical objects support children's learning. Understanding the role of physically manipulating representations has gained impetus with the increasing potential to integrate digital technology into physical objects: tangible technology. This thesis aimed to evaluate the potential for tangible technologies to support numerical development by examining young children’s (4-8 years) use of physical objects in a numerical task. This task required them to find all the different ways in which a number (e.g., 7) can be decomposed (e.g., into 2 & 5). Seven carefully designed studies compared children’s numerical strategies using physical objects (cubes) with other materials (paper/virtual representations) or no materials. The studies showed that physical objects not only helped children identify solutions through simple physical actions, but fostered strategies that related solutions such as swapping groups of cubes or moving just one cube to get a new solution. This led to predictions about how a computer might influence strategies by constraining children’s actions to moving just one object at a time using the mouse. These predictions were confirmed, and a further study showed how using materials that changed colour according to the number grouped could support strategies by drawing children’s attention to numerical changes. The research showed that, to help children identify ways to break down a number efficiently, it was more effective to constrain their actions using a graphical, rather than tangible, interface. However, when multiple (physical) objects could be manipulated, children were able to constrain their own actions and used a wider range of strategies. Although moving multiple objects can be facilitated through interfaces such as tabletop computers, this research indicated certain cognitive benefits of physically manipulating representations for children’s numerical development that may inform tangible designs. 2010-06-01 Thesis (University of Nottingham only) NonPeerReviewed application/pdf en arr https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/11372/1/AndrewManchesFinalThesis2010.pdf Manches, A.D. (2010) The effect of physical manipulation on children's numerical strategies: evaluating the potential for tangible technology. PhD thesis, University of Nottingham. tangible technology manipulatives learning mathematics
spellingShingle tangible technology
manipulatives
learning
mathematics
Manches, A.D.
The effect of physical manipulation on children's numerical strategies: evaluating the potential for tangible technology
title The effect of physical manipulation on children's numerical strategies: evaluating the potential for tangible technology
title_full The effect of physical manipulation on children's numerical strategies: evaluating the potential for tangible technology
title_fullStr The effect of physical manipulation on children's numerical strategies: evaluating the potential for tangible technology
title_full_unstemmed The effect of physical manipulation on children's numerical strategies: evaluating the potential for tangible technology
title_short The effect of physical manipulation on children's numerical strategies: evaluating the potential for tangible technology
title_sort effect of physical manipulation on children's numerical strategies: evaluating the potential for tangible technology
topic tangible technology
manipulatives
learning
mathematics
url https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/11372/