Math Bingo!

With summer coming soon, you can count on libraries and elementary schools to send home all kinds of reading incentives for the summer. One thing our library has served up in the past is reading Bingo for summer – a list of different kinds of books (and places to read them) arranged in a Bingo board. Sometimes they even partner with an ice cream shop – make a bingo, and get a free kids scoop!

 Early Family Math and math for love have put together this Math Bingo board, perfect for some fun, low-key, summer math for 3 – 8 year-olds!

Download it HERE

Neurodivergent teacher uses dyscalculia “superpower” to recreate full-scale, whale-sized replica of world’s first programmable digital computer

A full-scale replica of one of the earliest programmable digital computers now fills a classroom space in Arizona, built almost entirely from cardboard and wood by students working under a teacher who credits his own dyscalculia (the math equivalent of dyslexia) for shaping how he engineers.

The life-size recreation of ENIAC (Electronic Numerical Integrator and Computer), widely regarded as the world’s first general-purpose programmable electronic computer, stretches across hundreds of square feet and mirrors the layout of the original machine that once weighed about 30 short tons.

Read the article HERE

A View on Theories and Models in the Study of Dyscalculia

Dyscalculia is a learning disability in Mathematics. The prevalence rate of dyscalculia is between four to six percent among the population. Dyscalculia affects the academic achievement, social relationship, and even lifestyle of an individual. The purpose of this paper is to discuss two theories and two models of dyscalculia, namely Cognitive Development Theory, Theory of Minimal Cognitive Architecture, Triple-Code Model, and Model of Number Processing System. Piaget’s Cognitive Development Theory explains that every pupil has their own individual differences in cognitive development. Four stages of cognitive development are sensorimotor, preoperational, concrete operational, and formal operations. Anderson’s Theory of Minimal Cognitive Architecture demonstrates the ways of knowledge transmitting into brain. Pupils with learning disabilities such as dyscalculia are said to be mismatched with their chronological age. Dehaene’s Triple-Code Model predicts different pathways for learning in dyscalculia. Three main codes in this model are analogue magnitude representation, visual Arabic number form, and auditory verbal word frame. Six aspects in Model of Number Processing System are arithmetic facts, calculation procedures, Arabic numbers comprehension, verbal numbers comprehension, Arabic numbers production, and verbal numbers production. Overall, these theories and models are particular and suitable to be used to support the study in dyscalculia. Based on the theoretical framework, the learning process of dyscalculic pupils can be identified. The implication of this paper is they can be used to design a model or module for dyscalculia and to develop the instruments suitable for dyscalculic pupils.

See it HERE

Teachers’ Self-Efficacy in Dyscalculia: Development and Psychometric Validation of a New Scale

The aim of this study is to develop a valid and reliable scale for measuring the self-efficacy of primary school and mathematics teachers regarding dyscalculia. Grounded in Bandura’s Social Cognitive Theory, the study followed established scale development procedures. In the initial phase, a pool of 42 items was generated to assess teachers’ self-efficacy regarding dyscalculia. The items were reviewed by a panel of seven experts in the fields of psychometrics, mathematics education, special education, and psychology to ensure content validity. 

The findings indicate that the DSES is a valid and reliable instrument for assessing teachers’ self-efficacy regarding dyscalculia.

Read the study HERE