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      An Investigation of Using Keywords to Solve Word Problems

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      The Elementary School Journal
      University of Chicago Press

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          Effects of schema acquisition and rule automation on mathematical problem-solving transfer.

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            Understanding and solving word arithmetic problems.

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              Executive functions underlying multiplicative reasoning: problem type matters.

              We investigated the extent to which inhibition, updating, shifting, and mental-attentional capacity (M-capacity) contribute to children's ability to solve multiplication word problems. A total of 155 children in Grades 3-6 (8- to 13-year-olds) completed a set of multiplication word problems at two levels of difficulty: one-step and multiple-step problems. They also received a reading comprehension test and a battery of inhibition, updating, shifting, and M-capacity measures. Structural equation modeling showed that updating mediated the relationship between multiplication performance (controlling for reading comprehension score) and latent attentional factors M-capacity and inhibition. Updating played a more important role in predicting performance on multiple-step problems than did age, whereas age and updating were equally important predictors on one-step problems. Shifting was not a significant predictor in either model. Implications of proposing executive function updating as a mediator between mathematical cognition and chronological age and attention resources are discussed. Copyright (c) 2009 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                The Elementary School Journal
                The Elementary School Journal
                University of Chicago Press
                0013-5984
                1554-8279
                March 01 2022
                March 01 2022
                : 122
                : 3
                : 452-473
                Article
                10.1086/717888
                603a4430-a41b-486f-b6c8-550aaabba589
                © 2022
                History

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