Children are born with an ability to do arithmetic, whether they understand numbers or not, psychologist Elizabeth Spelke concludes. Such innate intuition could make arithmetic easier and more enjoyable when they have to learn it in school. Staff file photo Rose Lincoln/Harvard News Office |
They are born to addStudy finds children able to do arithmetic without countingSeptember 22, 2005William J. Cromie
How does someone who hasn't learned to count yet, say a preschooler, deal with numbers? Adults are comfortable with symbols like "10" to signify 10 balloons, beeps, or beliefs. But how do kids handle numbers when they don't know numbers? Very well, according to experiments done at Harvard University. The children performed all these tasks successfully, without actual counting or having any knowledge of number symbols, notes Elizabeth Spelke, a professor of psychology who led the study. Last year, Spelke and her colleagues reported on experiments with 5-month-old infants, which support the idea that thinking shapes language rather than the other way around. "Infants are born with a language-independent system for thinking about objects," Spelke concluded. "These intuitive concepts give meaning to the words they learn later." Her new findings suggest that the same can be said for numbers. Inborn intuition gives meaning to number symbols that kids learn later. "This is a surprising finding, given that many school-age children have considerable difficulty learning symbolic arithmetic," Spelke comments. "Our results offer the promise that new strategies in elementary education may be devised: strategies that harness children's pre-existing arithmetic intuitions to foster the acquisition of knowledge about symbolic numbers and operations." Spelke reports details of these arithmetic experiments in the latest issue of the Proceeding of the National Academy of Sciences, along with colleagues Hilary Barth, Kristen La Mont, and Jennifer Lipton. |