1. Math anxiety in second and third graders and its relation to mathematics achievement
- Author
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Vinod Menon, Maria Barth, Vanessa L. Malcarne, Sarah Wu, and Hitha Amin
- Subjects
lcsh:BF1-990 ,education ,behavioral disciplines and activities ,050105 experimental psychology ,Mathematical anxiety ,Developmental psychology ,Rating scale ,mental disorders ,medicine ,Achievement test ,Trait anxiety ,Psychology ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,Situational ethics ,General Psychology ,Original Research ,4. Education ,05 social sciences ,050301 education ,Wechsler Adult Intelligence Scale ,Construct validity ,math anxiety ,math anxiety assessment ,lcsh:Psychology ,Anxiety ,medicine.symptom ,mathematics achievement ,0503 education ,psychological phenomena and processes ,early math learning ,Clinical psychology - Abstract
Although the detrimental effects of math anxiety in adults are well understood, few studies have examined how it affects younger children who are beginning to learn math in a formal academic setting. Here, we examine the relationship between math anxiety and math achievement in second and third graders. In response to the need for a grade-appropriate measure of assessing math anxiety in this group we first describe the development of Scale for Early Mathematics Anxiety (SEMA), a new measure for assessing math anxiety in second and third graders that is based on the Math Anxiety Rating Scale. We demonstrate the construct validity and reliability of the SEMA and use it to characterize the effect of math anxiety on standardized measures of math abilities, as assessed using the Mathematical Reasoning and Numerical Operations subtests of the Wechsler Individual Achievement Test (WIAT-II). Math achievement, as measured by the WIAT-II Math Composite score, was significantly and negatively correlated with SEMA but not with trait anxiety scores. Additional analyses showed that SEMA scores were strongly correlated with Mathematical Reasoning scores, which involves more complex verbal problem solving. SEMA scores were weakly correlated with Numerical Operations which assesses basic computation skills, suggesting that math anxiety has a pronounced effect on more demanding calculations. We also found that math anxiety has an equally detrimental impact on math achievement regardless of whether children have an anxiety related to numbers or to the situational and social experience of doing math. Critically, these effects were unrelated to trait anxiety, providing the first evidence that the specific effects of math anxiety can be detected in the earliest stages of formal math learning in school. Our findings provide new insights into the developmental origins of math anxiety, and further underscore the need to remediate math anxiety and its deleterious effects on math achievement in young children.
- Published
- 2012