Abstract

The ability to estimate is a fundamental real-world skill; it allows students to check the reasonableness of answers found through other means, and it can help students develop a better understanding of place value, mathematical operations, and general number sense. Flexibility in the use of strategies is particularly critical in computational estimation. The ability to perform complex calculations mentally is cognitively challenging for many students; thus, it is important to have a broad repertoire of estimation strategies and to select the most appropriate strategy for a given problem. In this paper, we consider the role of students’ prior knowledge of estimation strategies in the effectiveness of interventions designed to promote strategy flexibility across two recent studies. In the first, 65 fifth graders began the study as fluent users of one strategy for computing mental estimates to multi-digit multiplication problems such as 17 × 41. In the second, 157 fifth and sixth graders began the study with moderate to low prior knowledge of strategies for computing mental estimates. Results indicated that students’ fluency with estimation strategies had an impact on which strategies they adopted. Students who exhibited high fluency at pretest were more likely to increase use of estimation strategies that led to more accurate estimates, while students with less fluency adopted strategies that were easiest to implement. Our results suggest that both the ease and accuracy of strategies as well as students’ fluency with strategies are all important factors in the development of strategy flexibility.

Highlights

  • Estimation is a critically useful skill in everyday life and in mathematics

  • In addition to being a fundamental, real-world skill, the ability to quickly and accurately perform mental computations and estimations has two additional benefits: 1) It allows students to check the reasonableness of their answers found through other means, and 2) it may help students develop a better understanding of place value, mathematical operations, and general number sense (Beishuizen, van Putten, & van Mulken, 1997; National Research Council, 2001)

  • We begin by describing students' prior knowledge of estimation strategies at pretest and explore the extent that students' prior knowledge impacted the development of strategy flexibility

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Summary

Introduction

Estimation is a critically useful skill in everyday life and in mathematics. We often must make quick computations or judgments of numerical magnitude without the aid of calculator or paper and pencil. In addition to being a fundamental, real-world skill, the ability to quickly and accurately perform mental computations and estimations has two additional benefits: 1) It allows students to check the reasonableness of their answers found through other means, and 2) it may help students develop a better understanding of place value, mathematical operations, and general number sense (Beishuizen, van Putten, & van Mulken, 1997; National Research Council, 2001). These benefits are encapsulated in the “Adding It Up” report from the National Research Council: “The curriculum should provide opportunities for students to develop and use techniques for mental arithmetic and estimation as a means of promoting deeper number sense” It is well documented that a large majority of students have difficulty estimating the answers to problems in their heads (Case & Sowder, 1990; Hope & Sherrill, 1987; Reys, Bestgen, Rybolt, & Wyatt, 1980; Sowder, 1992)

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