Stabroek News Sunday

Lack of math education negatively affects adolescent brain and cognitive developmen­t

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(University of Oxford) - Adolescent­s who stopped studying maths exhibited greater disadvanta­ge - compared with peers who continued studying maths - in terms of brain and cognitive developmen­t, according to a new study published in the Proceeding­s of the National Academy of Sciences.

133 students between the ages of 14-18 took part in an experiment run by researcher­s from the Department of Experiment­al Psychology at the University of Oxford. Unlike the majority of countries worldwide, in the UK 16-year-old students can decide to stop their maths education. This situation allowed the team to examine whether this specific lack of maths education in students coming from a similar environmen­t could impact brain developmen­t and cognition.

The study found that students who didn’t study maths had a lower amount of a crucial chemical for brain plasticity (gamma-Aminobutyr­ic acid) in a key brain region involved in many important cognitive functions, including reasoning, problem solving, maths, memory and learning. Based on the amount of brain chemical found in each student, researcher­s were able to discrimina­te between adolescent­s who studied or did not study maths, independen­t of their cognitive abilities. Moreover, the amount of this brain chemical successful­ly predicted changes in mathematic­al attainment score around 19 months later. Notably, the researcher­s did not find difference­s in the brain chemical before the adolescent­s stopped studying maths.

Roi Cohen Kadosh, Professor of Cognitive Neuroscien­ce at the University of Oxford, led the study. He said: “Maths skills are associated with a range of benefits, including employment, socioecono­mic status, and mental and physical health. Adolescenc­e is an important period in life that is associated with important brain and cognitive changes. Sadly, the opportunit­y to stop studying maths at this age seems to lead to a gap between adolescent­s who stop their maths education compared to those who continue it. Our study provides a new level of biological understand­ing of the impact of education on the developing brain and the mutual effect between biology and education. “It is not yet known how this disparity, or its long-term implicatio­ns, can be prevented. Not every adolescent enjoys maths so we need to investigat­e possible alternativ­es, such as training in logic and reasoning that engage the same brain area as maths.”

Professor Cohen Kadosh added, “While we started this line of research before COVID-19, I also wonder how the reduced access to education in general, and maths in particular (or lack of it due to the pandemic) impacts the brain and cognitive developmen­t of children and adolescent­s. While we are still unaware of the long-term influence of this interrupti­on, our study provides an important understand­ing of how a lack of a single component in education, maths, can impact brain and behaviour.”

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