The present study examined the number-specific parental language input to Mandarin- and English-speaking preschool-aged children. Mandarin and English transcripts from the CHILDES database were examined for amount of numeric speech, specific types of numeric speech and syntactic frames in which numeric speech appeared. The results showed that Mandarin-speaking parents talked about number more frequently than English-speaking parents. Further, the ways in which parents talked about number terms in the two languages was more supportive of a cardinal interpretation in Mandarin than in English. We discuss these results in terms of their implications for numerical understanding and later mathematical performance. Differences in mathematical achi...
This study reports cross-linguistic differences in forward digit span between 4-, 5-, and 6-year-old...
Differences in levels of numerical system transparency in Mandarin Chinese and English may affect ho...
The present study explores the contribution of language, culture, gesture and family to the developm...
The present study examined the number-specific parental language input to Mandarin- and English-spea...
Number-related language input has been shown to influence children's number word acquisition and mat...
Number-related language input has been shown to influence children’s number word acquisition and mat...
Number-related language input has been shown to influence children’s number word acquisition and mat...
The relative linguistic transparency of the Asian counting system has been used to explain Asian stu...
This paper examines why Asian children mathematically outperform children from other countries prior...
The current study investigated how Chinese and US children\u27s mathematical language may be related...
Wales uses languages with both regular (Welsh) and irregular (English) counting systems. Three group...
The belief that primary aged Asian children are superior in their knowledge of mathematical concepts...
East Asian pupils have consistently outperformed Western pupils in international comparisons of math...
East Asian pupils have consistently outperformed Western pupils in international comparisons of math...
Several cross-sectional studies have suggested that the transparency of the number-naming system of ...
This study reports cross-linguistic differences in forward digit span between 4-, 5-, and 6-year-old...
Differences in levels of numerical system transparency in Mandarin Chinese and English may affect ho...
The present study explores the contribution of language, culture, gesture and family to the developm...
The present study examined the number-specific parental language input to Mandarin- and English-spea...
Number-related language input has been shown to influence children's number word acquisition and mat...
Number-related language input has been shown to influence children’s number word acquisition and mat...
Number-related language input has been shown to influence children’s number word acquisition and mat...
The relative linguistic transparency of the Asian counting system has been used to explain Asian stu...
This paper examines why Asian children mathematically outperform children from other countries prior...
The current study investigated how Chinese and US children\u27s mathematical language may be related...
Wales uses languages with both regular (Welsh) and irregular (English) counting systems. Three group...
The belief that primary aged Asian children are superior in their knowledge of mathematical concepts...
East Asian pupils have consistently outperformed Western pupils in international comparisons of math...
East Asian pupils have consistently outperformed Western pupils in international comparisons of math...
Several cross-sectional studies have suggested that the transparency of the number-naming system of ...
This study reports cross-linguistic differences in forward digit span between 4-, 5-, and 6-year-old...
Differences in levels of numerical system transparency in Mandarin Chinese and English may affect ho...
The present study explores the contribution of language, culture, gesture and family to the developm...