Development of Proportional Reasoning: Where Young Children Go Wrong

Ty W. Boyer, Susan C. Levine, Janellen Huttenlocher

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180 Scopus citations

Abstract

Previous studies have found that children have difficulty solving proportional reasoning problems involving discrete units until 10 to 12 years of age, but can solve parallel problems involving continuous quantities by 6 years of age. The present studies examine where children go wrong in processing proportions that involve discrete quantities. A computerized proportional equivalence choice task was administered to kindergartners through 4th-graders in Study 1, and to 1st- and 3rd-graders in Study 2. Both studies involved 4 between-subjects conditions that were formed by pairing continuous and discrete target proportions with continuous and discrete choice alternatives. In Study 1, target and choice alternatives were presented simultaneously; in Study 2, target and choice alternatives were presented sequentially. In both studies, children performed significantly worse when both the target and choice alternatives were represented with discrete quantities than when either or both of the proportions involved continuous quantities. Taken together, these findings indicate that children go astray on proportional reasoning problems involving discrete units only when a numerical match is possible, suggesting that their difficulty is due to an overextension of numerical equivalence concepts to proportional equivalence problems. © 2008 American Psychological Association.
Original languageAmerican English
Pages (from-to)1478-1490
Number of pages13
JournalDevelopmental Psychology
Volume44
Issue number5
StatePublished - Sep 2008

Keywords

  • Continuous and Discrete Quantities
  • Intuitive and Explicit Processing
  • Mathematical Development
  • Proportional Reasoning

DC Disciplines

  • Psychology
  • Psychiatry and Psychology

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