4.2 Article

Longitudinal associations between parental mathematics anxiety and attitudes and young children's mathematics attainment

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ELSEVIER SCIENCE INC
DOI: 10.1016/j.jecp.2023.105779

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Mathematics anxiety; Mathematics attitudes; Home number experiences; Mathematics; Home learning environment

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This study explored the associations between parental mathematics anxiety and attitudes and children's mathematics attainment in early primary school. The results showed that parental mathematics anxiety and attitudes independently predicted children's mathematics attainment, regardless of the frequency of preschool home number experiences. The study also found that the positive association between preschool home number experiences and children's mathematics attainment was not weaker in the context of high parental mathematics anxiety or negative parental mathematics attitudes.
The associations between parental mathematics anxiety and atti-tudes and children's mathematics attainment in early primary school were explored. Initially, parents of preschool children (M-age = 3;11 [years;months]) completed a questionnaire indexing parental mathematics anxiety and attitudes and the frequency of preschool home number experiences. The children completed mathematics assessments in their first year (n = 231, M-age = 5;2) and second year (n = 119, M-age = 6;3) of schooling anda mathemat-ics anxiety questionnaire in their third year of schooling (n = 119, M-age = 6;7). A questionnaire indexing the frequency of primary school home number experiences was completed by 119 of the parents in their children's second year of schooling (M-age = 6;0). All indices of parental mathematics anxiety and attitudes predicted children's mathematics attainment in their first school year. These associations were independent of parental mathematics attain-ment and were not mediated by the frequency of preschool home number experiences. Furthermore, the positive association between preschool home number experiences and children's mathematics attainment was not weaker in the context of high parental mathematics anxiety or negative parental mathematics attitudes. One index of parental mathematics attitudes predicted children's mathematics attainment in their second school year, but this association was not significant when prior attainment was controlled. There was a stronger association between maternal mathematics anxiety and girls' attainment versus boys' attainment. Parental mathematics anxiety did not predict children's mathematics anxiety. The findings suggest that children whose parents have high mathematics anxiety or negative mathematics attitudes are more likely to have lower mathematics attainment in their first year of school. However, the mechanism underpinning this association is not yet established. (c) 2023 The Authors. Published by Elsevier Inc.

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