Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
7275584 | Journal of Experimental Child Psychology | 2014 | 13 Pages |
Abstract
Among adults, arithmetic training-transfer studies have documented a high degree of learning specificity. Provided that there is a delay of at least 1 day between training and testing, performance gains do not transfer to untrained problems, nor do they transfer to complement operation-inverted problems (e.g., gains for 4 + 7 = __ do not transfer to the complement subtraction problem, 11 â 4 = __, or vice versa). Here we demonstrate the same degree of learning specificity among 6- to 11-year-old children. These results appear to rule out, for the current training paradigm, operation-level procedural learning as well as any variant of complement problem mediation that would predict transfer. Results are consistent with either or both of two types of learning: (a) item-level procedural learning and (b) a shift to memory-based performance as predicted by the elemental elements model. These results suggest a developmental pattern such that specificity of learning among children is similar to that among adults. Educational implications are noted.
Related Topics
Social Sciences and Humanities
Psychology
Developmental and Educational Psychology
Authors
Drew Walker, Daniel Bajic, Laura Mickes, Jung Kwak, Timothy C. Rickard,