Home /Research /Using LOGO with Infant School Children
OTHER

Using LOGO with Infant School Children

Martin Hughes, Hamish Macleod, Cathie Potts

Year
1985
Citations
24

Abstract

Abstract The recent introduction of micro‐computers into schools is opening up many new avenues for developmental psychologists interested in studying how children learn. Of particular interest at present are approaches in which children program computers themselves, using languages such as LOGO and PROLOG. This paper describes a study in which a simplified version of LOGO was introduced to a group of six‐year‐olds in a severely deprived area of Edinburgh. The children used a special touch‐sensitive keyboard (Concept Keyboard) to control the movements of a floor‐crawling robot called a Turtle. The sessions with the Turtle were marked by high levels of concentration, collaborative problem‐solving and the use of mathematical language. Pre‐ and post‐tests on the British Ability Scales revealed statistically significant gains on the sub‐scales concerned with number and shape: these gains, however, were found only in the boys.

Keywords

Logo (programming language)CrawlingPsychologyEmbodied cognitionMathematics educationDevelopmental psychologyPrologTurtle (robot)Cognitive psychologyComputer science

Related papers

Browse all OTHER papers