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Easy as 1, 2, 3
Introducing young children to math

We read to our young children because we know that it will help them grow to love words and books. Every time we splash through puddles with them, we teach them about science. But when it comes to helping our children learn about math, most adults groan and shrug their shoulders. Flash cards anyone?

Despite what you might think, math isn’t just about skill and drill—in fact, helping children understand the basics of math can be a whole lot of fun.

Everyday Math

The good news is that you don’t have to be mathematical yourself in order to introduce your child to the nuts and bolts of math. We use math every day in so many ways that you and your children are probably already busy learning about math and may not even realize it. Every time children place a square block into its opening in the shape sorter or snaps a Saltine in half to share with a friend, they are demonstrating the beginnings of mathematical understanding. Each time you fill the kettle to make tea, you are estimating how much water you will need. When you count out money to pay for groceries, you are using math in a practical way.

The key is to start thinking about how math is a part of what we do naturally and to emphasize it with our children. Following are some examples of ways that you can work math concepts into the activities that you do together:

  • One, Two, Buckle My Shoe. Many children’s songs, rhymes and finger plays include counting and other language associated with math (think Five Little Monkeys or This Old Man). Each time you ask children if they want you to cut a sandwich in half or you count out loud as you stack blocks on top of one another, you are teaching them the words they will use to understand math concepts. Expand children's math vocabulary by making a game out of coming up with all the words that mean "big" (enormous, huge, gigantic) or "little" (small, tiny, minuscule). 
     
  • Practice number knowledge by counting with your children—the number of steps into the house, stuffed animals as they are tossed into the toy box, the number of Cheerios on your children’s tray. You will be amazed at how quickly they join in repeating the numbers with you. Although this will mostly be a word game at first, by age three most children begin to understand that the number said is associated with a corresponding amount of a certain object.
     
  • Make a game out of sorting and classifying objects. Toys can be lined up shortest to tallest. Socks, mittens and gloves or shoes can be dumped into piles and sorted into pairs or by color or type.
     
  • Encourage one-to-one correspondence. Enlist the help of preschoolers to set the table. Have them count out the number of plates, napkins, forks and spoons needed and help them set one of each out for every family member.
     
  • Look for numbers and shapes in the world around us. Car rides are a great time to look for all of the shapes of street signs or places where numbers pop up in the neighborhood and along the road. Make note of how a pizza starts out round and then becomes a bunch of triangles. Point out Mom’s round glasses and the rectangular door.
     
  • Work off some excess energy that comes from being cooped up inside with a game of Follow the Leader, using giant, medium and baby steps (Take five giant steps forward and three baby steps sideways). This teaches both size differences and knowledge of numbers. 
     
  • Measure objects in unconventional ways. Use a line of Goldfish crackers to measure a spoon; stack blocks beside your child to determine how many blocks tall she is.
     
  • Teach estimation by providing a variety of different sized containers for water play in the tub or use in the snow. ("How many drinking cups full of snow do you think it will take to fill this bucket?").
     
  • Count your pennies. Empty your change purse or dump a handful of coins from the change jar into a pile and help your child sort them by color, size and (with older children) type.
     
  • Many board games (Chutes and Ladders, Checkers, Tick-Tack-Toe) and card games are fun ways to teach children about numbers and basic math concepts, such as counting, problem-solving and patterns. Although decks of cards designed for children can be cute and colorful, nearly all popular children's card games can be played with an inexpensive deck of playing cards. For a comprehensive list of rules for children’s card games go to http://thehouseofcards.com/rules.html or check out the book Card Games for Children by Len Collis.  [top]

Math and children’s books

Youth Services Librarian Joyce Laiosa has helped coordinate Go Figure!, a national traveling exhibition (created by the Minnesota Children’s Museum and the American Library Association) of creative and fun hands-on math activities using children’s literature. She says that one of the best ways to introduce math concepts is with the tools that we frequently use ― children’s books.

"We want to start children out as early as possible with the concept that math isn’t just for math class...it’s everywhere," says Laiosa. "Literature is a fun way to get children to start thinking about math in ways other than by counting on their fingers."

Laiosa says that a book doesn’t have to be directly about numbers to teach math concepts. In fact, some of the best tools are those where the learning is more subtle (see books and suggested math activities above). Once you begin looking at the books you and your children choose, you will likely see signs of math concepts in many of them. 

Here's a list of books that can be used to encourage children’s math knowledge. These books are all appropriate for preschoolers. Books specifically geared to babies and toddlers are indicated with an asterisk. [top]

Number Sense

  • Ten, Nine, Eight by Molly Bang *
     
  • Roar! A Noisy Counting Book by Pamela Duncan Edwards *
     
  • Can You Count Ten Toes? Count to 10 in 10 Different Languages by Lezlie Evans
     
  • Ten Red Apples by Pat Hutchins
     
  • Eating Fractions by Bruce McMillan
     
  • Monster Math by Anne Miranda
     
  • Uno, Dos, Tres: One, Two, Three by Pat Mora
     
  • One Hundred Hungry Ants by Elinor J. Pinczes
     
  • Counting Crocodiles by Judy Sierra
     
  • Mouse Count by Ellen Stoll Walsh *
     
  • Emily’s First 100 Days of School by Rosemary Wells  [top]

Patterns

  • The Quilt by Ann Jonas ― Children can make their own "quilt" squares by gluing different shapes of colored paper into patterns of their own design or by copying familiar quilt patterns.
     
  • The Very Hungry Caterpillar by Eric Carle*
     
  • Piggie Pie by Margie Palatini
     
  • Five Little Ducks (book and tape) by Raffi*
     
  • Caps for Sale by Esphyr Slobodkina
     
  • I Went Walking by Sue Williams*  [top]

Size

  • The Biggest, Best Snowman by Margery Cuyler ― Rolling and stacking balls of snow for snow people is a great way to learn about size and to help develop your child’s upper body strength, which is necessary for gross and fine motor skill development.
     
  • Clifford, the Small Red Puppy by Norman Bridwell *
     
  • George Shrinks by William Joyce
     
  • Goldilocks and the Three Bears by James Marshall
     
  • Big and Little by Margaret Miller*
     
  • Joseph Had a Little Overcoat by Simms Taback
  •  [top]

Shape

  • Frog and Toad Are Friends: The Lost Button by Arnold Lobel―For children who no longer put objects in their mouths, buttons are wonderful for sorting by size, shape and color.
     
  • Color Zoo by Lois Ehlert*
     
  • Circle Dogs by Kevin Henkes*
     
  • Shapes by Jan Pienkowski*
     
  • It Looked Like Spilt Milk by Charles G. Shaw*
     
  • Shapes, Shapes, Shapes by Tana Hoban

Problem Solving

  • Quack and Count by Keith Baker
     
  • Sheila Rae’s Peppermint Stick by Kevin Henkes*
     
  • Jump, Kangaroo, Jump! by Stuart J. Murphy
     
  • If You Hopped Like a Frog by David Schwartz
     
  • Bunny Money by Rosemary Wells  [top]

 

 

 

 

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This page is maintained by Kim Smithgall, Communications Specialist, according to web publishing guidelines used by the Schuylerville Central School District. All rights reserved. This Web site was produced in cooperation with the Capital Region BOCES Communications Service. The district is not responsible for facts or opinions contained on any linked site. © 2008

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