Maternal cognitive guidance and early education and care as precursors of mathematical development at preschool age and in ninth grade

This study examined, in a sample of 66 mother–infant dyads, 2 early contextual precursors of later mathematical development at preschool age and at the end of comprehensive school. The path analyses showed that maternal autonomy support and scaffolding observed during joint play interactions in infancy, and time spent in various care contexts beyond infancy contributed more to variation in numerical skills than spatial skills tested at preschool age. Maternal autonomy supportive behaviours were related to differences in mathematics and other school grades collected in ninth grade, even after controlling for time spent in various care contexts. Moreover, joint play interactions mediated the relation between mothers' education and children's mathematical outcomes. The findings are discussed in relation to why early developmental contexts can provide an advantageous base for children's mathematical achievement in a society with a high‐quality education system. Highlights Does the quality of mother–infant interaction and amount of early childhood education and care beyond infancy predict children's mathematical development? Mothers' cognitive guidance observed during play predicted children's mathematics skills tested at preschool and assessed by teachers at 9th grade. Autonomy support and scaffolding in early developmental contexts can have far‐reaching influences on children's motivation and school achievement.
Source: Infant and Child Development - Category: Child Development Authors: Tags: RESEARCH ARTICLE Source Type: research