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Building digital cube houses to improve mental rotation skills

Building digital cube houses to improve mental rotation skills
Building digital cube houses to improve mental rotation skills
Prior research indicates that spatial skills, such as mental rotation skills (MRS), are a strong predictor for mathematics achievement, while other studies have also shown that MRS can be improved through training. This paper explores whether a well-known puzzle-oriented tool for building houses with 3D cubes is effective in improving performance in a standardised MRS measure that recorded accuracy and speed. The field experiment took place with 85 year 7 (11–12 year olds) pupils from an independent secondary school in the south of England. We used two conditions in the experiment, with the puzzle-oriented training tool being the intervention condition. The findings show there was a significant effect for accuracy but not for speed. Contrary to prior research our findings did not show any gender effects. The findings and implications are discussed in light of the existing literature around spatial skills, as well as design aspects.
0020-739X
Bokhove, Christian
7fc17e5b-9a94-48f3-a387-2ccf60d2d5d8
Redhead, Edward S.
d2342759-2c77-45ef-ac0f-9f70aa5db0df
Bokhove, Christian
7fc17e5b-9a94-48f3-a387-2ccf60d2d5d8
Redhead, Edward S.
d2342759-2c77-45ef-ac0f-9f70aa5db0df

Bokhove, Christian and Redhead, Edward S. (2025) Building digital cube houses to improve mental rotation skills. International Journal of Mathematical Education in Science and Technology. (doi:10.1080/0020739X.2024.2441889).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Prior research indicates that spatial skills, such as mental rotation skills (MRS), are a strong predictor for mathematics achievement, while other studies have also shown that MRS can be improved through training. This paper explores whether a well-known puzzle-oriented tool for building houses with 3D cubes is effective in improving performance in a standardised MRS measure that recorded accuracy and speed. The field experiment took place with 85 year 7 (11–12 year olds) pupils from an independent secondary school in the south of England. We used two conditions in the experiment, with the puzzle-oriented training tool being the intervention condition. The findings show there was a significant effect for accuracy but not for speed. Contrary to prior research our findings did not show any gender effects. The findings and implications are discussed in light of the existing literature around spatial skills, as well as design aspects.

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More information

Accepted/In Press date: 30 November 2024
e-pub ahead of print date: 14 January 2025

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 497227
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/497227
ISSN: 0020-739X
PURE UUID: 26f23ae4-3436-490e-9cf2-e6be4e5fa3c4
ORCID for Christian Bokhove: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-4860-8723
ORCID for Edward S. Redhead: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-7771-1228

Catalogue record

Date deposited: 16 Jan 2025 17:33
Last modified: 17 Jan 2025 02:47

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