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Math Intervention For Latino Parents and Kindergarteners Based on Food Routines

Abstract

Family food routines are important contexts through which children develop math knowledge and skills. The Food For Thought (FFT) program teaches Latino parents strategies to develop their kindergarten children’s math abilities during family food routines such as grocery shopping and cooking. We examined whether attendance to FFT was related to children’s math outcomes at post-test (right after program completion). Sixty-eight low-income Latino parents and their kindergarten children (M = 71 months) participated in the four-week program taking place in schools. Children’s math skills (counting, numeral recognition and cardinal understanding) were assessed at pre- and post-test. The association between parents’ attendance to FFT meetings and children′s math outcomes at post-test depended on children’s initial levels of math skills (i.e., math skills at pre-test). Children with lower initial math skills whose parents attended more FFT meetings had more advanced math outcomes at post-test, than children with lower initial math skills whose parents attended fewer FFT meetings. The effect size of this interaction was moderate, d = 0.46. Limitations and future directions of this early math intervention targeting Latino families are discussed.

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Posted in: Journal Article Abstracts on 04/04/2018 | Link to this post on IFP |
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