A One-Year Classroom-Randomized Trial of Mental Abacus Instruction for First- and Second-Grade Students

D. Barner,Angeliki A. Athanasopoulou,Junyi Chu,M. Lewis,Elisabeth Marchand,Rose M. Schneider,Michael C. Frank

Published 2018 in Journal of Numerical Cognition

ABSTRACT

Mental Abacus (MA) is a popular arithmetic technique in which students learn to solve math problems by visualizing a physical abacus structure. Prior studies conducted in Asia have found that MA can lead to exceptional mathematics achievement in highly motivated individuals, and that extensive training over multiple years can also benefit students in standard classroom settings. Here we explored the benefits of shorter-term MA training to typical students in a US school. Specifically, we tested whether MA (1) improves arithmetic performance relative to a standard math curriculum, and (2) leads to changes in spatial working memory, as claimed by several recent reports. To address these questions, we conducted a one-year, classroom-randomized trial of MA instruction. We found that first-graders students struggled to achieve abacus expertise over the course of the year, while second-graders were more successful. Neither age group showed a significant advantage in cognitive abilities or mathematical computation relative to controls, although older children showed some hints of an advantage in learning place-value concepts. Overall, our results suggest caution in the adoption of MA as a short-term educational intervention.

PUBLICATION RECORD

  • Publication year

    2018

  • Venue

    Journal of Numerical Cognition

  • Publication date

    2018-01-30

  • Fields of study

    Mathematics, Computer Science, Education

  • Identifiers
  • External record

    Open on Semantic Scholar

  • Source metadata

    Semantic Scholar

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REFERENCES

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