NotesFAQContact Us
Collection
Advanced
Search Tips
Showing 1 to 15 of 17 results Save | Export
Carpenter, Thomas P. – 1980
This study investigated the effect of initial instruction on the processes children use to solve basic addition and subtraction verbal problems. Prior to instruction and following a 2-month introductory unit on addition and subtraction, 43 first-grade children were individually tested on verbal problems representing different models of addition…
Descriptors: Addition, Elementary Education, Elementary School Mathematics, Learning Processes
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Carpenter, Thomas P.; And Others – Arithmetic Teacher, 1975
Results of the National Assessment of Education Progress (NAEP) related to subtraction are summarized and interpreted. Implications for instruction are discussed. (SD) Aspect of National Assessment (NAEP) dealt with in this document: Results (Interpretation).
Descriptors: Achievement, Elementary School Mathematics, Elementary Secondary Education, Instruction
Carpenter, Thomas P.; And Others – 1988
This study used knowledge derived from classroom-based research on teaching and laboratory-based research on children's learning to improve teachers' classroom instruction and students' achievement. Twenty first-grade teachers, assigned randomly to an experimental treatment, participated in a month-long workshop in which they studied findings on…
Descriptors: Addition, Elementary Education, Elementary School Mathematics, Instructional Improvement
Carpenter, Thomas P.; And Others – 1982
This material is designed to examine the research on how children acquire basic addition and subtraction concepts and skills. Two major lines of theories of the development of basic number concepts, called logical concept and quantification skill approaches, are identified. Major recurring issues in the development of early number concepts are…
Descriptors: Addition, Basic Skills, Cognitive Processes, Computation
Carpenter, Thomas P.; And Others – 1985
This study investigated children's representation of addition and subtraction problems with canonical and noncanonical number sentences, to see whether children would directly represent the structure of a problem if both types of sentences were available. Subjects were 22 first graders and 41 second graders randomly assigned either to a Canonical…
Descriptors: Addition, Educational Research, Elementary Education, Elementary School Mathematics
Carpenter, Thomas P.; And Others – 1979
Forty-three first-grade children, who had received no formal instruction in addition and subtraction, were individually administered 20 problems that could be solved using addition or subtraction. The problems were selected to represent the following semantic types: joining, separating, part-part-whole, comparison, and equalizing. Responses were…
Descriptors: Addition, Cognitive Processes, Educational Research, Educational Strategies
Carpenter, Thomas P.; And Others – 1979
This study was presented at the 1979 meeting of the American Education Research Association (AERA), San Francisco. It investigated the relationship between the structure of simple addition and subtraction problems and the types of processes children use to solve them prior to receiving formal arithmetic instruction. Specific strategies which young…
Descriptors: Addition, Conference Reports, Educational Research, Elementary Education
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Carpenter, Thomas P.; And Others – Journal for Research in Mathematics Education, 1988
The study investigated children's ability to write number sentences for simple addition and subtraction word problems. The results suggest that open number sentences may provide mathematical symbolism that allows young children to build on informal strategies for presenting and solving simple word problems. (Author/PK)
Descriptors: Addition, Basic Skills, Educational Research, Elementary Education
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Carpenter, Thomas P.; And Others – Arithmetic Teacher, 1980
Discussed are the results of the second National Assessment of Educational Progress (NAEP) mathematics assessment concerning children's ability to solve verbal problems. The data indicate that the commonly held view that children cannot solve word problems may be an oversimplification. (Author/TG) Aspect of National Assessment (NAEP) dealt with in…
Descriptors: Achievement, Addition, Cognitive Development, Educational Assessment
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Carpenter, Thomas P.; And Others – Elementary School Journal, 1996
Suggests that children enter school with a great deal of informal intuitive knowledge of mathematics that can serve as the basis for developing much of the formal mathematics of the primary school curriculum. Describes a research-based model of children's thinking that teachers can use to interpret, transform, and reframe their informal or…
Descriptors: Addition, Cognitive Development, Cognitive Processes, Division
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Carpenter, Thomas P.; And Others – Journal for Research in Mathematics Education, 1988
Forty first-grade teachers' pedagogical content knowledge of children's solutions of addition and subtraction word problems was investigated. Most teachers could identify many of the critical distinctions between problems, and the primary strategies used to solve them, but did not have a coherent organizational scheme. (MNS)
Descriptors: Addition, Educational Research, Elementary School Mathematics, Grade 1
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Carpenter, Thomas P.; And Others – Journal for Research in Mathematics Education, 1993
After a year of instruction, 70 kindergarten children were individually interviewed as they solved basic, multistep, and nonroutine word problems. Thirty-two used a valid strategy for all 9 problems, and 44 correctly answered 7 or more problems. Modeling provided a unifying framework for thinking about problem solving. (Author/MDH)
Descriptors: Addition, Cognitive Processes, Cognitive Style, Division
Moser, James M.; Carpenter, Thomas P. – 1982
This document reports on the initial phase of a project investigating how to relate formal mathematical representational and problem solving skills to informal strategies that children naturally invent to solve simple addition and subtraction problems. A program was developed that allows pupils to solve word problems on a microcomputer. A pilot…
Descriptors: Addition, Computer Programs, Computers, Educational Research
Moser, James M.; Carpenter, Thomas P. – 1982
The focus is on the problem-solving behaviors of primary age children on one-step verbal or story problems involving addition and subtraction. When children are given a simple word problem for which they have not learned the necessary algorithms, they are often able to derive a solution on their own. This report focuses on the child-invented…
Descriptors: Addition, Cognitive Processes, Educational Research, Elementary School Mathematics
Carpenter, Thomas P.; Moser, James M. – 1979
This paper describes the research program of the Mathematics Work Group of the Wisconsin Research and Development Center for Individualized Schooling. The major interest is in the development of children's abilities to solve verbal addition and subtraction problems and particularly in the processes and strategies used by children. Three factors…
Descriptors: Addition, Elementary Education, Elementary School Mathematics, Grade 1
Previous Page | Next Page ยป
Pages: 1  |  2