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Kindergarten: Math Skills Prove Key To Later Academic Success, Researchers Say

Kindergarten Math Skills

  First Posted: 12/23/2011 5:18 pm Updated: 12/23/2011 5:18 pm

This article comes to us courtesy of California Watch

By Eleanor Yang Su

It's one of the biggest debates going on among early childhood development experts: Is it more important for kindergartners to focus on academics and learn their ABC's and numbers? Or spend more time on social and emotional issues, like how to play nice and pay attention?

Recent research by a UC Irvine education professor shows that math skills among kindergartners turn out to be a key predictor for future academic success.

Professor Greg Duncan and his colleagues analyzed studies conducted with close to 20,000 kindergartners, assessing their knowledge of math, literacy and other skills, including their ability to stay on task and make friends. The studies followed the kindergartners for several years through elementary school, testing them in reading and math.

Even after accounting for differences in IQ and family income, Duncan found that those who learned the most math in kindergarten tended to have the highest math and reading scores years later.

"It was very surprising," said Duncan, whose research appears in a new book. "Everyone says reading is most important, and if a child can read by third grade, the chance of dropping out of school is so much lower. But it was math that stood out as serving the kids best in promoting later achievement. Reading was next most important, and then attention skills were third most important."

Social skills, including the ability to self-regulate and control one's temper, also are important. But Duncan found that they weren't as closely linked to future academic success as math and reading. Students who exhibit antisocial behavior through elementary and middle school tend to drop out of high school at higher rates, Duncan found, but again, those with persistently low math scores also dropped out at higher rates.

He said his research shows that kindergarten teachers ought to devote more time to math instruction. It can be simple things, he said, like learning shapes and numbers and the concept of smaller and bigger numbers along a number line.

"If you show kindergartners a line with zero at one end and 10 at the other, and ask them, 'Where's the 8?', they tend to put the 8 in the middle," Duncan said. "They don't know that there's this cardinal pattern. And unless you show them a number line and they understand where numbers are in relation to each other, it'll be hard for them to get addition and subtraction later on."

But some question whether children are ready for certain math concepts in kindergarten. As kindergarten has grown more academically oriented in the past decade, there's been an increasing emphasis on teaching more advanced material to younger children.

"Kindergartners are learning what used to be learned in the first grade," said Jill Cannon, a researcher who has written about kindergarten for the Public Policy Institute of California. "Some people even argue that preschool is becoming too academic."

Some childhood advocates warn that instructional time is edging out playtime and putting unnecessary pressure and stress on kids. In its report [PDF] "Crisis in the Kindergarten," the nonprofit Alliance for Childhood argues that children were being taught to master material beyond their developmental level while being deprived of playtime to help them cope with the stress.

"Some kindergartners are being taught to count to 100 by 1's and by 10's," said Edward Miller, a senior researcher for the Alliance for Childhood. "But it's very clear from the research that 5-year-olds are not capable of really understanding that kind of large number. So they're being taught to repeat something that's meaningless. And if they don't, they get labeled as failures."

Duncan said kindergartners are ready for a variety of math concepts that can be taught in fun and playful ways.

"I'm not implying that there needs to be flashcards and drill-and-kill exercises," Duncan said. He suggests teachers use math lessons that let kids explore and manipulate numbers. For parents, he recommends they point out shapes to their kids and play cards and board games to help them get comfortable with counting.

Eleanor Yang Su is an investigative reporter for California Watch, a project of the non-profit Center for Investigative reporting. Find more California Watch stories here.

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02:58 PM on 12/27/2011
sharing and caring and gay friendly multiculturalism that stresses non competition, no grades, no homework or studying and none of the pressures to 'achieve' are the keys to success. As well as vegetarianism, animal rights and recycling.
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
CabinAgue
We are ALL in this together.
04:19 PM on 12/28/2011
oh good grief
12:02 AM on 12/29/2011
whats your point
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08:15 PM on 12/26/2011
I don't understand how social skills and attending skills are not the most important. If the child doesn't have social skills and can't attend, he or she isn't going to be learning math or reading or anything else.

Many children who come into kindergarten have not been to preschool and don't have any of the skills needed to learn in groups. They are sometimes only children of older couples who have been the center of their parents' universe and can't cope with others getting attention. Also, some children have obviously never been told "no" and had it followed through. And some children are put in kindergarten early because their parents want free day care.

There are many sites and articles and books about skills students should have before they go to kindergarten, and the most important are getting along with others and following directions. If a child can do that, they will most likely do fine in academics.

As the article states, children with antisocial behaviors are highly likely to drop out--and also highly unlikely to find steady employment. Before I became a teacher one of the jobs I had was at a temp agency sending people out on jobs. Over and over we heard from employers, they would rather have someone who can follow directions and get along with others than someone with high skills who causes problems.
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JBaker
fictio cedit veritati
08:50 PM on 12/27/2011
Your post is interesting. It has been my experience that children with social developmental issues have parents with the same problems. Children are brilliant mimics, but unfortunately, what they mimic from their parents behavior or attitudes is not always constructive to their development.
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10:32 AM on 12/28/2011
Working for a temp agency is a good way to get a foot in the door of a company and also to get good references which can lead to a job in another company. We heard from employers over and over they were willing to train if the person was willing to work. But we also got complaints from employers about personality conflicts and people who were hard to get along with, and that went in their file. If we heard the same thing from several companies, we offered few, and eventually no, jobs to the troublemakers. The people we sent out reflected on our agency, so we wanted to send people who made the employers happy. We even tried to tell people why they weren't getting jobs and sometimes it helped and sometimes it didn't.

You're right about children taking after their parents. Many questions we had about some students were answered once we meet their parents during conferences or when the parents came in to complain about something. "The apple doesn't fall far from the tree" is a long time, well-known saying for a good reason.
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
CabinAgue
We are ALL in this together.
04:29 PM on 12/28/2011
"I don't understand how social skills and attending skills are not the most important."

I suspect because kindergartners (as this study is discussing) are not all developmentally ready.  It is just about maturity.  My son had impulse control problems, and attentional problems, at that age.  He had no trouble learning, was reading, was ready for more involved math concepts, was bored easily...  In 1st grade he was evaluated and the psychologist tried to reassure the teacher that he was not going to have any trouble, as he was not just on track academically, but ahead, and he just needed time (and help) to develop the other skills.

Looking back, that psychologist was exactly right.  But the teacher didn't like the information.  In reality, she wasn't providing much that he needed academically.  But he did need to learn how to deal with attending when there was (a tremendous amount of) distraction and chaos around him.  That came with time.

(FYI, my son didn't have what you would call "antisocial behaviors".  He did have trouble with noise, with kids bugging him, shaking off someone else's taunts, unpredictable changes in routine, lots of print and visual distractions around him.  At the age of 6, however, in a quiet place he could read children's novels to himself for hours, or listen to me read advanced novels, again for hours.  Likewise follow complicated Lego patterns, etc.  That is, he didn't cause problems, but he couldn't ignore, or attend well, when problems were around him.)
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06:23 PM on 12/28/2011
I'm glad it worked out well for your son but as a teacher I've seen the opposite too often. The antisocial description was brought up in the article, but I think very few people are actually antisocial since it depends on the setting and the people around them.
06:39 PM on 12/26/2011
Here's a math question for this guy:
Take 30, divide it by 1/2 then add 10. What is the answer?
Over ninety per cent of people I ask say 25, which is wrong.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
JBaker
fictio cedit veritati
09:02 PM on 12/27/2011
I would respectfully differ on two matters:

1) It is not a math question, it is a reading comprehension question.

2) The term of confusion is "1/2". Most readers would presume it to indicate 1/2 of 30 [or 15] but it could be 1/2 of any number, not just 30.

And since the number in question is not provided, the correct answer is: the question makes no sense, therefore no answer need be inferred.
09:31 PM on 12/27/2011
1/2 is one-half. There is an answer. What is it? No calculator can be used. Use only a piece of paper and a pencil.
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behavingbadly
reality doesn't care what you believe
05:37 PM on 12/30/2011
You are correct to the extent that arriving at 25 is an error in reading comprehension; however the problem is clearly and correctly stated. It asks for the number of halves in thirty wholes, which is 60 ... plus 10, which equals 70. No inferences required, and nothing even vaguely nonsensical.
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Tony Rochon
Trying to fly under the radar
03:43 PM on 12/31/2011
70
04:57 PM on 12/25/2011
True story about middle school math in a dodgy part of LA Unified:

Mr. R: What's 1 times x?
Class: 1.
Mr. R: What's 1 times 10?
Class: 10.
Mr. R: What's 1 times 7?
Class: 7.
Mr. R: What's 1 times 2?
Class: 2.
Mr. R: Okay, so what's 1 times x?
Class: 1.

Merry Christmas all.
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rewith85man
03:35 PM on 12/25/2011
Yeah, education and communication with other people are important because kids without any of them would have a much difficult life at a later age.
09:32 AM on 12/25/2011
come on,the "new way" is to just pump up self esteem,and give everybody a trophy for just showing up!! ....see how well that works?? For an example,see what the occupy folks are wanting with their "lists of demands".....something for nothing,and not working towards a goal in life....
noahmarder
Exposing the regressive lies, one by one
10:44 PM on 12/25/2011
If I am working toward a goal, I don't expect to have the goalposts moved when I get to the one-yard line. When you tell kids that a college education is the way to get a good job, and when they finish their education, there are no good jobs for them, that is what you are doing.

You really should keep your anti-Occupy rants out of the education section considering that Occupy protestors are generally well educated.
05:54 PM on 12/26/2011
They should "occupy " the whitehouse...
01:55 AM on 12/27/2011
The self esteem movement is long gone. You really need to keep up. For the last 10 years it has all been about No Child Left Behind, which means lots of standardized testing. You don't pass or get an award just for taking the test. It sounds like you have been listening to some very out-of-date talking points.
12:29 PM on 12/27/2011
It takes YEARS to formulate a child,the concept may be "out of date",but the results/consequences are what we are seeing today!!
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Ariel Bonzai
Naked is the best disguise.
05:16 AM on 12/25/2011
Establishing an early joy for learning seems prudent so these critics are illadvised to suggest that it's to emphasize these concepts as soon as possible. Of course concerns about overdoing are not without substance. In Chinese homes, the kids are exposed to higher level learning and conditioned to be disciplined and diligent about their studies. They do very well on SAT and other exams, but I anpm not sure going to school after school and on Saturdays to compete with peers is joyful. Then again, I am not thrilled by suburban white kids who are entitled and lazy either. It seems to me there is a key to creating llife long Learners of us all. And it begins when we are very small. Parking kids in front of teevees and video games will not cut it. Reading alone won't do. I have always struggled with math. I know it is amazing and metaphysical, not to mention practical. But the figures frustrate me. It's taken me a long time to budget and use my money wisely as a result. I hear first five is worse at budgeting than I am and there's buzz about cirruption in this program. The study sounds solid though. I hope more of his is what will come out of the expenses.
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JBaker
fictio cedit veritati
09:29 PM on 12/27/2011
I have no disagreement with anything you have said, I am just adding a few thoughts...

I teach both children and adults, and to state the obvious, no two people learn exactly the same way or have the same natural aptitude. Skills in math, language, music, geometric visualization, and so forth, do not all come from the same part of the brain. An individual may be brilliant in one subject and dull in another: that is commonly accepted, I believe, and it is not something that should be a source of anxiety. Very few of us are Leonardo Da Vinci, so we can lighten up just a little in our expectations of ourselves without being merely lazy.

I try to make lessons with students engaging and lively, using humor as well as visual references quite freely. Sometimes learning is not fun, however, but a tedious and frustrating ordeal. I don't back away from that at all since that is, as the saying goes, a "learning opportunity" in of itself.

Learning "stacks of facts" is not all that difficult, and is mostly a mechanical skill. What takes real practice is learning how to be patient with the process, maintain focus without 'burning out', and breaking any problem down into smaller components and reconstruct it on one's own terms, rather than just staring at the problem in frustration. When the student learns that, they have taken a giant stride forward in self-mastery, and nothing can intimidate them for long.
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Ariel Bonzai
Naked is the best disguise.
10:11 PM on 12/27/2011
Words to live by.
09:09 PM on 12/24/2011
Math isn't just about someday getting a job that involves math. It also teaches critical thinking skills, organizational skills, spatial and proportional skills, problem solving skills, etc. Most math classes I have observed have the students very engaged and displaying better discipline than some other subjects. Like music, math is a universal language that opens the mind.
07:11 AM on 12/24/2011
Let's be careful about teaching math skills. Pretty soon Jr. will ask how other kids can have two mommies.
09:35 AM on 12/25/2011
and,after reading "dreams...." he will ask how come bho has two daddies.
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08:21 PM on 12/26/2011
If you mean President Obama's biological father and step father, many children are in that situation. Blended families are not new.
07:59 PM on 12/25/2011
Interesting that the people who would have a problem with that are often the ones with such a learning deficiency.
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OCerInTN
Hoplophobics worst nightmare.
12:42 AM on 12/24/2011
"and if a child can read by third grade"

When I was in school, a child who could not read in the 1st grade was held back.
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Ariel Bonzai
Naked is the best disguise.
05:20 AM on 12/25/2011
I had lousy parents but taught myself to bread at 4. My kid read before he began Kindergarten. If they can't read by 3rd grade they are way behind, and now thy use standardized test in kindergarten!
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OCerInTN
Hoplophobics worst nightmare.
05:18 PM on 12/25/2011
Luckily, I had a mother who taught me to read, write (print and cursive), and do math before I entered kindergarten.

By the 3rd grade, I was reading at a 10th grade level, and doing math at a 12th grade level. All this from a single parent who was on welfare (for a short time) under the lousy economy of Jimmy Carter.
09:34 AM on 12/25/2011
and potty trained too!
11:34 PM on 12/23/2011
This may be more a measure of the kid than of the inherent value of math skills at that age. Not enough factors were controlled to make an conclusions. I certainly didn't push my kids to do math at that age. But I certainly did make sure they knew their math facts (flash cards anyone?) as they got along in elementary school. I would also give them long arithmetic problems to make sure they had their math processing down. My kids teachers taught them multiplication via the lattice method. I make sure they knew the traditional method as well. Then when they came to working with polynomials and complex numbers they found the traditional methods worked.

I also generated word problems and workbooks to make sure that they had mastered their material.

My son is in 6th grade taking introductory algebra now. My daughter is in 10th grade taking calculus for college credit. Both appear to be headed for engineering careers.
07:17 AM on 12/24/2011
How very sad. I did the same thing with (to) my two sons.

One is an attorney and one is a physician. I wish I could turn back the clock and teach them to play.

They both told me they wanted to be engineers (my profession) and I kicked their butts. Engineering is an awful career. You work your butt off, start at $60,000 a year and retire at $90,000. My college roommate flunked out of the engineering college, went into business and is now retired. I have 15 more years at the fun factory.

If you love your children, let them be normal.
10:44 AM on 12/24/2011
Engineering isn't a bad career. It is not a lucrative as some, but better than most.

When the Asian and .Com collapses wiped out my profit from a startup, I went back to working as an engineer. Given the ageism in the software industry, I left my previous employer and joined a consultancy where I am doing quite well.

My daughter is off to college next year, most likely through Running Start. She is looking at a double major - mechanical engineering and electrical engineering - controls and plans on a masters in prosthetic engineering / robotic integration. My son is more likely to go into civil engineering.
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JBaker
fictio cedit veritati
08:42 PM on 12/27/2011
My father was an engineer, but he told me nothing about his profession (or anything else, for that matter). Since I know nothing about the profession, I hope you could give me an insider's perspective on why engineers are not better paid...
noahmarder
Exposing the regressive lies, one by one
01:15 AM on 12/25/2011
For smart, well motivated, students, Algebra in 6th grade (or even 5th) and calculus by 10th grade shouldn't be unusual. When I took AP calculus BC (also in 10th grade), there were only six people in the class - two seniors, three juniors, and I. My high school had about 1100 students. I am stating this as a criticism of math education; not as a way to brag about my intelligence. What passes for an acceptable high school math education today is a joke. Even with taking (and performing well in) every advanced math course offered at my high school, plus multivariate calculus as an online college course while I was a senior, I still felt as though many foreign students had a leg up on me in my math and physics courses in college.
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Ariel Bonzai
Naked is the best disguise.
05:22 AM on 12/25/2011
Like 95% of public school kids are failing algebra.
08:59 AM on 12/28/2011
For reading and writing, learning can be self-paced. A kid can read what s/he wants whenever....Math education has always been structured and tracked. It would be nice if there was an informal way for kids to learn at their own pace, outside the classroom, in case they're motivated/interested.