Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://t2-4.bsc.es/jspui/handle/123456789/59926
Title: Cross-cultural study of the mediation effects of executive functions on numeracy skills, Subset 2: Experimental data 2013-2015
Keywords: CHILD DEVELOPMENT
COGNITIVE PROCESSES
ACADEMIC ABILITY
NUMERACY
DEVELOPMENTAL PSYCHOLOGY
SOCIO-ECONOMIC STATUS
2020
Description: In the fields of education, sociology and economics, there is a long-standing connection between socioeconomic status (SES) and school outcomes in a wide variety of cultural settings, but these studies have yet to examine the possible mediating effects of domain-general cognitive factors such as executive functions (EF). Addressing this gap and building on evidence for links between EF and numeracy, the current cross-cultural study used a large sample (N = 835) of 9- to 16-year-old children from Hong Kong and the United Kingdom to the examine the independence and interplay of SES and EF as predictors of numeracy skills. Our analyses yielded three key findings: (1) EF consistently predicts numeracy skills across sites and genders; (2) Associations between SES and EF differ by site and gender; and (3) Associations between numeracy skills and SES/EF differ by site and gender. Together with previous findings, our results suggest culture-specific associations between SES, EF and numeracy, indicating that cultural insights may enable impactful shifts in public policy to narrow the achievement gap between children from affluent and disadvantaged families.<p>Recent advances in developmental cognitive neuroscience suggest a link between executive functions (EF) and school achievement. Briefly, executive functions include our ability to reason, plan ahead, multi-task or switch between tasks, sustain attention, delay gratification, and make complex decisions and change dramatically between childhood and adulthood. Children from Asia are widely reported to outperform children from North America Europe on EF tasks, but this evidence is focused almost entirely on young children and largely ignores the question of whether there are cross-cultural differences in EF for older children and adults. This project includes two studies that have been carefully designed to establish the validity, magnitude and universality of any East-West contrast in children’s EF performances. Together, these studies have three key goals: to improve the measurement of children’s EF by developing psychometrically robust, culturally-fair task batteries that are suitable for use across a broad range of ages to enhance our understanding of putative cultural contrasts by examining links between within-group variation in EF performance and parenting factors to explore whether the link between EF and academic achievement show cultural universality and the extent that parental factors influence this link.</p>
URI: https://t2-4.bsc.es/jspui/handle/123456789/59926
Other Identifiers: 10.5255/UKDA-SN-854072
854072
https://doi.org/10.5255/UKDA-SN-854072
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