ABSTRACT

Dyscalulia is caused by developmental differences in the structures and patterns of activation in the brain. Affected learners require timely and tailored interventions, informed and shaped by neurological findings.

In this ground-breaking text, Professor Butterworth explains the latest research in the science of dyscalculia in a clear non-technical way. Crucially, he shows that dyscalculia is caused by a core deficit in the ability to accurately and swiflty represent the number of objects in a set, an ability that underpins learning arithmetic, and clearly differentiates dyscalculia from other forms of early maths learning difficulties. Butterworth uniquely links research to pedagogical practice, to explain how science can be used for the identification of dyscalculia, and for the development of strategies to best help affected learners acquire arithmetical competence. The text provides robust interventions that focus on helping pupils to strengthen their ability to process numerosities and link them to the familiar number symbols, counting words and digits. It shows that science has clear and specific implications both for assessment and intervention.

A landmark publication for the dyscalculia community, Dyscalculia: From Science to Education will become an essential resource for teachers, professionals, parents and sufferers, as well as for university courses that include specific learning disabilities.

chapter Chapter 2|17 pages

Number sense

Our intuitive understanding of numbers

chapter Chapter 3|15 pages

The arithmetic starter kit

chapter Chapter 4|18 pages

Core deficit in the number module

The cognitive cause of dyscalculia

chapter Chapter 6|20 pages

The dyscalculic brain

chapter Chapter 8|10 pages

Society, school, and home

chapter Chapter 9|19 pages

Assessment

How to identify dyscalculic learners

chapter Chapter 10|20 pages

Intervention for dyscalculic learners

chapter Chapter 11|16 pages

Policy

What to do about dyscalculia locally and nationally