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Dataset
Part of Project: Listening to Speech and Non-speech Sounds Activates Phonological and Semantic Knowledge Differently
Description: This contains the data related to the project "Listening to Speech and Non-speech Sounds Activates Phonological and Semantic Knowledge Differently" and its related manuscript which is available at 10.1177/1747021820923944
Dataset
Part of Project: Embedding Working Memory Training within Math Problem Solving
Description: This file contains data associated with "Children’s Baseline Working Memory Moderates the Effects of Working Memory Training,” a paper submitted for publication by Lynn Fuchs, Sonya Sterba, Marcia Barnes, and Douglas Fuchs of Vanderbilt University.
Dataset
Part of Project: Embedding Working Memory Training within Math Problem Solving
Description: This file contains data associated with "Building Word-Problem Solving and Working Memory Capacity: A Randomized Controlled Trial Comparing Three Intervention Approaches", a publication in the Journal of Education Psychology (2022), 2022, Vol. 114, No. 7, 1633–1653.
Dataset
Part of Project: Embedding Working Memory Training within Math Problem Solving
Description: This file contains data associated with "Building Word-Problem Solving and Working Memory Capacity: A Randomized Controlled Trial Comparing Three Intervention Approaches," a publication in the Journal of Education Psychology (2022), 2022, Vol. 114, No. 7, 1633–1653.
Dataset
Part of Project: Math Achievement, Attitudes, and Anxiety
Description: Mathematics achievement, attitudes, and anxiety were longitudinally assessed for 342 (169 boys) adolescents from 7th to 9th grade, inclusive, and Latent Growth Curve Models were used to assess the relations among these traits and developmental change in them.
Dataset
Part of Project: Sex Differences in Mathematics Anxiety and Attitudes
Description: Sex differences in the strength of the relations between mathematics anxiety, mathematics attitudes, and mathematics achievement were assessed concurrently in sixth grade (n = 1,091, 545 boys) and longitudinally from sixth to seventh grade (n = 190, 97 boys).