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Featured researches published by Nicole Hansen.


Journal of Experimental Child Psychology | 2013

Developmental predictors of fraction concepts and procedures

Nancy C. Jordan; Nicole Hansen; Lynn S. Fuchs; Robert S. Siegler; Russell Gersten; Deborah Micklos

Developmental predictors of childrens fraction concepts and procedures at the end of fourth grade were investigated in a 2-year longitudinal study. Participants were 357 children who started the study in third grade. Attentive behavior, language, nonverbal reasoning, number line estimation, calculation fluency, and reading fluency each contributed uniquely to later conceptual understanding of fractions. Number line estimation, attentive behavior, calculation fluency, and working memory made unique contributions to acquisition of fraction arithmetic procedures. Notably, number line estimation made the largest independent contribution in both models. The results suggest that although there is considerable shared variance among the predictors, both general and number-related competencies are uniquely important for explaining why some children struggle with fractions.


Developmental Psychology | 2016

Developmental growth trajectories in understanding of fraction magnitude from fourth through sixth grade.

Ilyse Resnick; Nancy C. Jordan; Nicole Hansen; Vinaya Rajan; Jessica Rodrigues; Robert S. Siegler; Lynn S. Fuchs

Development of fraction number line estimation was assessed longitudinally over 5 time points between 4th and 6th grades. Although students showed positive linear growth overall, latent class growth analyses revealed 3 distinct growth trajectory classes: Students who were highly accurate from the start and became even more accurate (n = 154); students who started inaccurate but showed steep growth (n = 121); and students who started inaccurate and showed minimal growth (n = 197). Younger and minimal growth students typically estimated both proper and improper fractions as being less than 1, failing to base estimates on the relation between the numerator and denominator. Class membership was highly predictive of performance on a statewide-standardized mathematics test as well as on a general fraction knowledge measure at the end of 6th grade, even after controlling for mathematic-specific abilities, domain-general cognitive abilities, and demographic variables. Multiplication fluency, classroom attention, and whole number line estimation acuity at the start of the study predicted class membership. The findings reveal that fraction magnitude understanding is central to mathematical development. (PsycINFO Database Record


Journal of Educational Psychology | 2017

The Codevelopment of Children's Fraction Arithmetic Skill and Fraction Magnitude Understanding.

Drew H. Bailey; Nicole Hansen; Nancy C. Jordan

The importance of fraction knowledge to later mathematics achievement, along with U.S. students’ poor knowledge of fraction concepts and procedures, has prompted research on the development of fraction learning. In the present study, participants’ (N = 536) development of fraction magnitude understanding and fraction arithmetic skills was assessed over 4 time points between 4th and 6th grades. Latent state-trait modeling was used to examine codevelopment of these 2 areas of fraction knowledge. Fraction arithmetic skill predicted later fraction magnitude understanding, and conversely, fraction magnitude understanding predicted later fraction arithmetic skill. The results are consistent with a bidirectional model of the development of fraction concepts and procedures, in which knowledge of one type facilitates learning of the other type. However, transfer in both directions between fraction arithmetic skill and fraction magnitude understanding was more likely to occur later in the development of fraction knowledge, after fraction arithmetic with unlike denominators had been taught in school (during 5th grade in the current sample). Furthermore, the effects of previous knowledge of the other type were small and not nearly as substantial as the effects of previous knowledge on later knowledge of the same type. Findings suggest a need for instruction to link fraction magnitude understanding to fraction arithmetic skill and vice versa.


Cognitive Development | 2015

General and math-specific predictors of sixth-graders’ knowledge of fractions ☆

Nicole Hansen; Nancy C. Jordan; Edmund Fernandez; Robert S. Siegler; Lynn S. Fuchs; Russell Gersten; Deborah Micklos


Contemporary Educational Psychology | 2017

Identifying learning difficulties with fractions: A longitudinal study of student growth from third through sixth grade

Nicole Hansen; Nancy C. Jordan; Jessica Rodrigues


Journal of Experimental Child Psychology | 2016

Pathways to fraction learning: Numerical abilities mediate the relation between early cognitive competencies and later fraction knowledge

Ai Ye; Ilyse Resnick; Nicole Hansen; Jessica Rodrigues; Luke Rinne; Nancy C. Jordan


Teaching Exceptional Children | 2016

Preparing for Algebra by Building Fraction Sense.

Jessica Rodrigues; Nancy Dyson; Nicole Hansen; Nancy C. Jordan


Society for Research on Educational Effectiveness | 2016

Mediation Effects of Latent Numerical Abilities on the Associations between Domain General Competencies and Fraction Knowledge.

Ai Ye; Nicole Hansen; Ilyse Resnick; Jessica Carrique; Nancy C. Jordan


Grantee Submission | 2016

Developmental Growth Trajectories in Understanding of Fraction Magnitude from Fourth through Sixth Grade.

Ilyse Resnick; Nancy C. Jordan; Nicole Hansen; Vinaya Rajan; Jessica Rodrigues; Robert S. Siegler; Lynn S. Fuchs


Archive | 2015

Growth and Achievement in Multiplication Fluency from Third through Sixth Grade

Jessica Carrique; Nicole Hansen; Nancy C. Jordan

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Robert S. Siegler

Carnegie Mellon University

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Ai Ye

University of Delaware

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Drew H. Bailey

University of California

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