Poster Presentation 1 Brenna Hassinger-Das UD School of Education (Cognition, Development, & Instruction) bhass@udel.edu The Storybook Number Competencies Intervention: Learning Quantitative Vocabulary and Number Sense through Story Reading Previous research has identified key elements of number sense including counting, number knowledge, and number transformation (Malofeeva et al., 2004) that predict later mathematics outcomes (Jordan, Kaplan, Oláh, & Locuniak, 2006; Jordan, Glutting, & Ramineni, 2010). Evidence suggests all children regardless of socioeconomic status can develop number competencies through targeted instruction (Dyson, Jordan, & Glutting, in press; Fuchs, 2005). Recent research also notes that vocabulary knowledge influences at least some parts of numeracy development (Wynn, 1992; Pupura, Hume, Sims, & Lonigan, 2011) and that this knowledge also differs with SES (Klibanoff, Levine, Huttenlocher, Vasilyeva, & Hedges, 2006; Hart & Risley, 1995). Since a pilot study general vocabulary intervention did not affect number sense, it is conjectured that an intervention using trade books to target specific quantitative vocabulary words describing mathematical ideas and concepts might increase children s vocabulary (Beck & McKeown, 2001a; Biemiller & Boote, 2006; Coyne et al., 2004) and number sense abilities (Jennings et al., 1992; Hong, 1996; Wynn, 1992). By combining mathematics and vocabulary learning into one intervention, instructors can maximize their instructional time by addressing two crucial subjects at once (Gary & Whitin, 1994).
Poster Presentation 2 Research Question 1. To what extent does explicit instruction in quantitative vocabulary through a storybook intervention lead to gains in quantitative vocabulary understanding as well as children s number sense relative to a number sense intervention group and a business-as-usual control group? Methods/Analysis Approximately 130 kindergartners from four urban, low-income elementary schools will be randomly selected for the study and equally divided into one of the three groups: a quantitative vocabulary intervention group (Storybook Number Competencies), a number sense intervention group (Number Sense) that does not use storybooks, and business-as-usual control group. A pretest, immediate posttest, and delayed posttest design will be used. Measures of dependent variables include the Number Sense Brief (NSB; Jordan, Glutting, Ramineni, & Watkins, 2010), the Bracken Basic Concept Scale 3: Receptive: Quantity subtest (BBCS-3: R; Bracken, 2006), the Woodcock-Johnson III Tests of Achievement Brief Battery/Form C: Letter/Word Identification and Passage Comprehension subtests (WJ-III; Woodcock, McGrew, & Mather, 2007), and the WJ-III: Applied Problems and Calculation subtests. The interventions will begin in January 2012 with groups of four children per instructor for three 30-minute sessions per week over the course of eight weeks seven weeks of instruction and one week of review. The storybook intervention is modeled after Beck & McKeown s (2001b) Text Talk curriculum. Each week, students will read one storybook and engage in math and vocabulary related activities that cover approximately six vocabulary words.
Poster Presentation 3 The researcher anticipates a statistically significant difference between the two intervention groups and the control group in the following ways: 1) the Storybook Number Competencies group will score highest on the BBCS-3: R and WJ-III Letter/Word Identification and Passage Comprehension subtests, and 2) the Number Sense group will score highest on the NSB with the Storybook Number Competencies group also scoring higher than the control group.
Poster Presentation 4 References Beck, I.L., & McKeown, M.G. (2001a). Text talk: Capturing the benefits of read-aloud experiences for young children. The Reading Teacher, 55(1), 10-20. Beck, I.L., & McKeown, M.G. (2001b). Text Talk: Robust Vocabulary Instruction: Level A. New York: Scholastic, Inc. Biemiller, A., & Boote, C. (2006). An effective method for building meaning vocabulary in primary grades. Journal of Educational Psychology, 98(1), 44-62. Bracken, B.A. (2006). Bracken Basic Concept Scale-Third Edition: Receptive. San Antonio, TX: The Psychological Corporation. Coyne, M.D., Simmons, D.C., Kame'enui, E.J., & Stoolmiller, M. (2004). Teaching vocabulary during shared storybook readings: An examination of differential effects, Exceptionality, 12(3), 145-162. Dyson, N.I., Jordan, N.C., & Glutting, J. (in press). A number sense intervention for urban kindergarteners at-risk for mathematics difficulties. Journal of Learning Disabilities. Fuchs, L.S., Compton, D.L., Fuchs, D., Paulsen, K., Bryant, J.D., & Hamlett, C.L. (2005). The prevention, identification, and cognitive determinants of math difficulty. Journal of Educational Psychology, 97(3), 493-513. Gary, C.C., & Whitin, D.J. (1994). Promoting mathematical explorations through children s literature. Arithmetic Teacher, 41(7), 394-400. Hart, B., & Risley, R. T. (1995). Meaningful differences in the everyday experience of young American children. Baltimore, MD: Paul H. Brookes.
Poster Presentation 5 Hong, H. (1996). Effects of mathematics learning through children s literature on math achievement and dispositional outcomes. Early Childhood Research Quarterly, 11, 477-494. Jennings, C.M., Jennings, J.E., Richey, J., & Dixon-Krauss, L. (1992). Increasing interest and achievement in mathematics through children s literature. Early Childhood Research Quarterly, 7, 263-276. Jordan, N.C., Glutting, J., & Ramineni, C. (2010). The importance of number sense to mathematics achievement in first and third grades. Learning and Individual Differences, 20, 82-88. Jordan, N. C., Glutting, J., Ramineni, C., & Watkins, M. W. (2010). Validating a number sense screening tool for use in kindergarten and first grade: Prediction of mathematics proficiency in third grade. School Psychology Review, 39(2), 181-185. Jordan, N.C., Kaplan, D., Oláh, L.N., & Locuniak, M.N. (2006). Number sense growth in kindergarten: A longitudinal investigation of children at risk for mathematics difficulties. Child Development, 77(1), 153-175. Klibanoff, R.S., Levine, S.C., Huttenlocher, J., Vasilyeva, M., & Hedges, L.V. (2006). Preschool children s mathematical knowledge: The effect of teacher math talk. Developmental Psychology, 42(1), 59-69. Malofeeva, E., Day, J., Saco, X., Young, L., & Ciancio, D. (2004). Construction and evaluation of a number sense test with Head Start children. Journal of Educational Psychology, 96(4), 648-659.
Poster Presentation 6 Pupura, D.J., Hume, L.E., Sims, D.M., & Lonigan, C.J. (2011). Early literacy and early numeracy: The value of including early literacy skills in the prediction of numeracy development. Journal of Experimental Child Psychology, 110(4), 647-658. Woodcock, R. W., McGrew, K. S., & Mather, N. (2007). Woodcock-Johnson III. Itasca, IL: Riverside. Wynn, K. (1992). Children s acquisition of the number words and the counting system. Cognitive Psychology, 24, 220-251.