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The quandary of diagnosing mathematical difficulties in a generally low performing population
Brazilian studentsâ mathematical achievement was repeatedly observed to fall below average levels of
mathematical attainment in international comparison studies such as PISA. In this article, we argue that
this general low level of mathematical attainment interferes with the diagnosis of developmental
dyscalculia when the psychometric criteria is used: establishing of an arbitrary cut-off (e.g., performance
< percentile 10) may lead to misleading diagnoses. Therefore, the present study set off to evaluate the
performance of Brazilian school children on basic arithmetic operations. Seven hundred and six children
from 3rd to 5th grades completed a calculation task assessing arithmetic fluency in addition, subtraction,
and multiplication. In line with PISA results, children presented difficulties in all arithmetic operations
investigated. Children performed better in addition than subtraction and multiplication, and 3rd and 4th
graders were outperformed by 5th graders in all three operations. However, even after five years of
formal schooling, less than half of 5th graders performed perfectly on simple addition, subtraction, and
multiplication problems. Therefore, these data substantiate the argument that the sole use of a
psychometric criterion might not be sensible to diagnose dyscalculia in the context of a generally low
performing population, such as Brazilian primary school children. When the majority of children fail
the task, it is hard to distinguish atypical from typical numerical development. As such, other diagnostic
approaches, such as Response to Intervention, might be more suitable in such a context