Maths is all around us and it is needed for many aspects of everyday life. Children and sometimes parents, don’t realise how much maths we use each day. It is important that we actively point out numbers, shapes, time, directions and calculations as we see and use them. For example: think of all the maths concepts you might use to make cookies. You might have to buy some of the ingredients before you start, you need to weigh the ingredients, you have to think about how many cookies you need, how long to bake them for, what shape and size to make them.
For some children, maths seems to come naturally but for others, it can be confusing and difficult. So what can we do to help all children succeed in maths? The key is to build the right foundations early on through practical activities, observation and talk. Maths in the early years should be more about doing than writing sums and getting the right answers. The key skills to develop right from the start are counting, estimation, and partitioning.
Partitioning is much more than splitting numbers into tens and ones, which we often practise at school. It can involve experimenting with ways to split different numbers into 2 or more groups. You can use counters, cubes, beads, pasta or even pieces of playdough. Pick a number below 10 and ask your child to count out this number of objects. Then their challenge is to split the objects in as many ways as possible. This is the foundation of number bonds and helps children understand the conservation of numbers. That is, the idea that even though we can split a number or arrange the number in different ways it is still the same number. At first, it is more important to verbalise what they are doing, than to record it pictorially or formally. It is also a good way to introduce maths vocabulary. For example, 3 and 4 is the same as 7, or 2 plus 5 equals 7, or 7 take away 1 makes 6. This activity can be extended to any number and rods or straws can be used to represent tens. When children discover the patterns and relationships between numbers themselves through play, they will gain a deeper understanding and memory of number facts. This in turn will lead to confident and successful learners.
Practical activities are the key to success in maths and should encouraged both at school and at home.
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