Article

Working memory, reading, and mathematical skills in children with developmental coordination disorder

Details

Citation

Alloway TP (2007) Working memory, reading, and mathematical skills in children with developmental coordination disorder. Journal of Experimental Child Psychology, 96 (1), pp. 20-36. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jecp.2006.07.002

Abstract
The aim of the present study was investigate the relationship between working memory and reading and mathematical skills in 55 children diagnosed with developmental coordination disorder (DCD). The Wndings indicate a pervasive memory deWcit in all memory measures. In particular, deWcits observed in visuospatial short-term and working memory tasks were signiWcantly worse than in the verbal short-term memory ones. On the basis of these deWcits, the sample was divided into high and low visuospatial memory ability groups. The low visuospatial memory group performed signiWcantly worse on the attainment measures compared to the high visuospatial memory group, even when the contribution of IQ was taken into account. When the sample was divided into high and low verbal working memory ability groups, verbal working memory skills made a unique contribution to attainment only when verbal IQ was taken into account, but not when performance IQ was statistically controlled. It is possible that the processing demands of the working memory tasks together with the active motor component reXected in the visuospatial memory tasks and performance IQ subtest both play a crucial role in learning in children with DCD.

Keywords
Developmental coordination disorder; working memory; literacy; numeracy; Short-term memory; Memory in children; Learning disabled children; Mathematical ability in children; Literacy; Motor ability in children; Motor skills disorders Child

Journal
Journal of Experimental Child Psychology: Volume 96, Issue 1

StatusPublished
Publication date31/01/2007
Publication date online29/09/2006
URLhttp://hdl.handle.net/1893/800
PublisherElsevier
ISSN0022-0965