Abstract

Math anxiety (MA) affects students of all age groups. Because of its effects on children's academic development, the need to recognize its early manifestations has been highlighted. We designed a European-Spanish version of the Scale for Early Mathematics Anxiety (SEMA; Wu et al. (2012)), and assessed its psychometric properties in a sample of children aged 7 to 12 years. The participants (967 typically developing children) were elementary school students recruited from ten schools. Children reported their general and math anxiety levels in an individual session and performed nonverbal IQ and math abilities subtests in a group session. Teachers reported the final math grades. The psychometric indices obtained, and the resulting factor structure revealed that the European-Spanish version of the SEMA developed in this study is a reliable and valid measure to evaluate MA in children from 3rd to 6th grade. Moreover, we explored gender differences, that resulted in small effect sizes, which disappeared when controlling for trait anxiety. Differences across grades were found for both global MA and the numerical processing anxiety factor but not for the situational and performance anxiety factor. Finally, MA was negatively associated with students' math achievement, although the strength of the associations varied with the MA measure selected, the kind of math achievement analyzed, and the school stage considered. Our findings highlight the relevance of MA in elementary school and highlight the need for an early identification of students at risk of suffering MA to palliate the negative consequences of MA in children's cognitive and academic development.

Highlights

  • ObjectivesWe aimed to test whether the factor structure of the Scale for Early Mathematics Anxiety (SEMA) found by Wu et al [3] replicates in our sample

  • Math anxiety (MA) is a worldwide problem affecting students of all age groups

  • The results showed that global MA, the numerical processing anxiety factor, and the situational and performance anxiety factor were significantly and negatively related to math grades, r = -.26, p < .001, r = -.22, p < .001, and r = -.24, p < .001, respectively

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Summary

Objectives

We aimed to test whether the factor structure of the SEMA found by Wu et al [3] replicates in our sample. The main objective of this study was to generate a European-Spanish adaptation of the Scale for Early Mathematics Anxiety (SEMA) and to assess its psychometric properties in a sample of typically developing children. By adapting the SEMA to the European-Spanish language and childhood stage, we aimed to further analyze age and gender differences in children’s MA, the relationship between MA and general anxiety, and the association of MA with mathematics performance. We aimed to study whether there was an interaction between MA and school stage in predicting math performance

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