The foundations for these concepts were laid by Piaget and Brissiaud, but most of their work is in french. In English, "Young children reinvent arithmetic" by Kamii is an excellent and practically oriented book based on Piaget's theories, that you may find useful. Although it is 250 pages.
This approach has become mainstream in maths teaching today, but unfortunately often misunderstood by teachers. The point of using different strategies to arrive at the same answer in arithmetics is NOT that children should memorize different strategies, but that they should be given as many tools as possible to increase the chance that they are able to play around with and compress the concept being learned.
The clearest expression of the concept of compression is maybe in this paper, I don't know if it helps or if it's too academic.
I should be able to chat with an llm about this paper, but my gut says you've given me the glimmer of where I need to go. This is something I've been deeply deeply frustrated about for 30 years now, I had really given up hope of ever being able to process mathematics (whatever they are) properly, it's a real task to figure out how to get someone to see how your brain work and then have them understand how to provide you with some framework to grasp what they know.
Once again I wanted to thank you for slowing down and taking the time to leave this thoughtful comment, if everyone took 5 minutes to try to understand what the other person is saying to see if they can help, the world would be a considerably better place. Thank you.
The foundations for these concepts were laid by Piaget and Brissiaud, but most of their work is in french. In English, "Young children reinvent arithmetic" by Kamii is an excellent and practically oriented book based on Piaget's theories, that you may find useful. Although it is 250 pages.
This approach has become mainstream in maths teaching today, but unfortunately often misunderstood by teachers. The point of using different strategies to arrive at the same answer in arithmetics is NOT that children should memorize different strategies, but that they should be given as many tools as possible to increase the chance that they are able to play around with and compress the concept being learned.
The clearest expression of the concept of compression is maybe in this paper, I don't know if it helps or if it's too academic.
https://files.eric.ed.gov/fulltext/EJ780177.pdf