Deaf and hard of hearing students' problem-solving strategies with signed arithmetic story problems.

Claudia M Pagliaro, Ellen Ansell
Author Information
  1. Claudia M Pagliaro: Department of Counseling, Educational Psychology, and Special Education, Michigan State University, East Lansing, USA.

Abstract

The use of problem-solving strategies by 59 deaf and hard of hearing children, grades K-3, was investigated. The children were asked to solve 9 arithmetic story problems presented to them in American Sign Language. The researchers found that while the children used the same general types of strategies that are used by hearing children (i.e., modeling, counting, and fact-based strategies), they showed an overwhelming use of counting strategies for all types of problems and at all ages. This difference may have its roots in language or instruction (or in both), and calls attention to the need for conceptual rather than procedural mathematics instruction for deaf and hard of hearing students.

MeSH Term

Child
Child, Preschool
Deafness
Education of Persons with Hearing Disabilities
Female
Hearing
Humans
Male
Mathematics
Problem Solving