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The development of procedural knowledge: An alternative explanation for chronometric trends of mental arithmetic
Authors:Arthur J. Baroody
Affiliation:University of Rochester U.S.A.
Abstract:In a review of the Chronometrie literature, M. H. Ashcraft (Developmental Review, 1982, 2, 213–236) concluded that the development of number fact efficiency is due to a shift from relying on procedural knowledge such as counting to relying on declarative knowledge (a stored network of facts). This model assumes that all procedural processes are slow or remain slow, which is probably not the case. An alternative account posits that the key change in number fact efficiency involves a shift from slow counting procedures to principled procedural knowledge. As rules, heuristics, and principles become more familiar and interconnected, their use, for example, in producing the number facts becomes more automatic. The use of such procedural knowledge would be cognitively more economical than storing individual facts in long-term memory. Finally, existing Chronometric data can readily be interpreted in terms of this alternative model.
Keywords:Requests for reprints should be sent to Arthur J. Baroody   Graduate School of Education and Human Development   University of Rochester   Rochester   NY 14627.
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