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Children can learn basic mathematics skills before starting their first year of school. The best part is it doesn't need to involve writing tedious mathematics problems on a piece of paper!
Doing mathematics experientially is much more fun for young children. Here are five fun hands‑on counting activities you can do at home to build your child's early counting and number skills without them even knowing.
Watch your child improve their counting skills with hundreds of fun and interactive counting activities! Designed by experienced elementary school teachers for ages 3–9, your child will fall in love with the colourful characters and have a blast collecting acorns and hatching new critters at the end of each lesson. Plus enjoy full access to Reading Eggs, the multi‑award winning learn‑to‑read program when you sign up for your FREE Mathseeds trial!
This is an easy at‑home counting game to pull together with your little ones. Grab a dozen lima beans and paint one side of the beans with red nail polish or use non‑toxic spray paint on a sheet of newspaper. Place 10 beans in a small container or breath mint tin, shake, and spill them on a table. How many beans show up red? How many beans show up white? How many beans in all? Shake again and again to learn all the ways to make sets of ten. Your child can also count the beans, make patterns, and explore addition and subtraction.
Take one ice cube tray and a bag of cotton balls. Put two cotton balls in the left side of the ice cube tray and ask your child to match it on the other side. They can begin making sets or use the patterns for addition and subtraction. How many cotton balls in all? Once your child gets the hang of it, use the ice cube tray to teach place value. Make tens on the left side and ones on the right side.
Here's a fantastic counting activity for all the little car enthusiasts out there! Start by gathering a bunch of toy cars and a single A4 sheet of paper. Draw out parking spaces and label each space with a number from 1 to 10. Say a number and ask your child to place a car in the correct space. If you have several toy cars of different colors, ask them to park a specific car into a specific parking space.
For a yummy mathematics treat, assemble a pile of your child's favorite snack. Choose something small, such as jellybeans, gummy bears, or raisins. Grab a dice and roll it. Count out the number you landed on. Roll the dice again and add or subtract that number of snacks to or from your snack pile. Repeat this activity until you only have one or two snacks left in the pile. Who knew counting activities could be so delicious?!
Cut five sheets of A4 paper into quarters so you have 20 evenly sized sheets. Write a number at the top of each page from 1 to 20. Take a sponge and apply a small amount of three different colors of paint (this will be used as a palette). Have your child read the number on each page and then print the correct number of circles by pressing the end of a paper towel roll onto a color on the sponge. You can make this activity more difficult by focusing on the teen numbers and asking your child to stamp ten times in one color, then work out how many more to make the teen number using a different color (e.g. 13 is 10 and 3).
Watch your child improve their counting skills with hundreds of fun and interactive counting activities! Designed by experienced elementary school teachers for ages 3–9, your child will fall in love with the colourful characters and have a blast collecting acorns and hatching new critters at the end of each lesson. Plus enjoy full access to Reading Eggs, the multi‑award winning learn‑to‑read program when you sign up for your FREE Mathseeds trial!