Developmental Origins of Low Mathematics Performance and Normal Variation in Twins from 7 to 9 Years
A previous publication reported the etiology of mathematics performance in 7-year-old twins (Oliver et al., 2004). As part of the same longitudinal study we investigated low mathematics performance and normal variation in a representative United Kingdom sample of 1713 same-sex 9-year-old twins based on teacher-assessed National Curriculum standards. Univariate individual differences and DeFries-Fulker extremes analyses were performed. Similar to our results at 7 years, all mathematics scores at 9 years showed high heritability (.62–.75) and low shared environmental estimates (.00–.11) for both the low performance group and the full sample. Longitudinal analyses were performed from 7 to 9 years. These longitudinal analyses indicated strong genetic continuity from 7 to 9 years for both low performance and mathematics in the normal range. We conclude that, despite the considerable differences in mathematics curricula from 7 to 9 years, the same genetic effects largely operate at the two ages.
| Item Type | Article |
|---|---|
| Keywords | GENERAL COGNITIVE-ABILITY ACADEMIC-ACHIEVEMENT MULTIVARIATE 7-YEAR-OLDS ETIOLOGY CHILDREN NURTURE |
| Subjects |
Biological Sciences > Cognitive Psychology Biological Sciences > Educational Psychology Biological Sciences > Developmental Psychology |
| Departments, Centres and Research Units | Psychology |
| Date Deposited | 02 Jul 2010 07:28 |
| Last Modified | 04 Jul 2017 09:25 |