| This article first appeared in the December 2004
issue of Literacy Today
(issue no. 41). |
Dr Daniela O'Neill, of the University of Waterloo, Canada,
discusses the link found in her research between early oral
storytelling abilities and achievement in maths.
Maths and storytelling may seem like very different abilities,
but, in a recent study, we found that pre-school children's
early storytelling abilities were predictive of their mathematical
achievement two years later.
Three and four-year-old children were shown a book that they
had never seen before which contained only pictures (a shortened
version of Mercer Mayer's Frog Goes to Dinner) and
were asked to tell the story to a puppet, Ernie (a Sesame
Street character). To increase the motivation for children
to tell the story, we told them that Ernie had never heard
the story before.
The children were not prompted in any way and were free to
say as much or as little about each page as they wished. In
this way, we anticipated getting the best picture of what
children could accomplish on their own and, therefore, a more
sensitive measure of their storytelling abilities. In this
first stage of the study, we also administered a general test
of language ability to children, the Test of Early Language
Development - 2 (TELD-2).
Children were shown a story where a boy brings his pet frog
to a restaurant and it causes all sorts of mayhem by jumping
around. Seven aspects of children's storytelling ability were
measured: the mean length of children's utterances; vocabulary
diversity; use of conjunctions; subordinate clause use; the
number of events in the story talked about; the ability to
shift clearly from one character in the story to another as
the action shifts; and the number of references to the mental
states of characters, such as what they were thinking or feeling.
Two years later, the children were given a number of tests
of academic achievement including a test of mathematical achievement.
We found that children who scored highly on the mathematics
test had also scored highly on certain measures of their storytelling
ability two years earlier, and vice versa if they scored poorly.
However, it was only certain aspects of storytelling that
showed a relation with mathematical achievement, such as children's
abilities to relate the events of the story; to talk about
the mental states of characters; to shift clearly between
characters; and to use conjunctions such as "because."
In contrast, children's general level of language ability,
as measured by the TELD-2, showed no relation to later mathematical
performance, supporting one of the initial hypotheses that
narrative ability might be more predictive of certain aspects
of later academic achievement than general language ability
alone.
Compared to previous studies examining links between narrative
ability and later academic achievement, this study is the
first to examine this relation in typically-developing children
under the age of five. It is also one of few studies to employ
an unprompted story-generation task and the first to specifically
compare different narrative measures and to include narrative
measures capturing aspects of how the storyteller conveys
perspective. We believe that the relations seen in this study
are partly due to the methods we used to increase the enjoyment
of storytelling for the children, which provided a sensitive
measure of what they could achieve on their own.
Although more research is needed, the results suggest that
building strong oral storytelling skills early in the pre-school
years may be helpful in preparing children for learning mathematics
when they enter school. It may be beneficial to foster those
aspects of storytelling in which the teller must capture the
actions and perspectives of characters as they interact with
each other; that is, capturing how one character's actions
may lead to a reaction by the other and then this can lead
to further actions and reactions, and how these actions affect
what the characters may know, think, say, or feel.
These results also lend support to a theoretical argument
of mathematician Keith Devlin, who suggested in his book The
Math Gene that, "reasoning about mathematical relationships
between mathematical (abstract) objects is no different from
reasoning about
human relationships between people."
Given these findings, we will continue to explore more precisely
how these two domains of thinking are related and to delve
more deeply into how different aspects of storytelling ability
may relate to different aspects of mathematical thinking.
References
D.K. O'Neill, M.J. Pearce and J.L. Pick (2004) Preschool
children's narratives and performance on the Peabody Individualized
Achievement Test - Revised: evidence of a relation between
early narrative and later mathematical ability, First Language,
vol. 24, pp. 149-183.
K. Devlin (2000) The math gene: how mathematical thinking
evolved and how numbers are like gossip, New York: Basic
Books.
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