News

Little kids are looking at a lot of dots these days. The theory behind this increasingly popular practice is that an effective way to teach counting might be by … not counting. That’s the ...
A fun series, featuring presenter Rodd, who uses rhymes and songs to help children with counting numbers, addition and subtraction. These clips are taken from the original BBC series, Counting ...
After all, most children, if asked to hand over a set number of toys, can’t reliably do that until about age 4. It’s not until then that they really understand that words like “three” and ...
A bottom-up hundreds chart. (Vera Wagner), Author provided (no reuse) Counting by 10s. Children can move from one number to another in the chart to solve problems.Considering 24 + 20, for example ...
Millions of children have learned their numbers on "Sesame Street," where Count von Count has, for decades, embodied the joy of counting. He is, of course, notoriously meticulous: He will leave no ...
Research has shown that kids don’t fully understand the meaning of number words until they’re around preschool age, but according to a new study published in Developmental Science, tots may ...
North Dakota KIDS COUNT released a report that outlines how North Dakota can build a better child care system. The report, which is called “A modern economy depends on child care.
Children SOAR into reading, counting with SCLSNJ Published: Mar. 11, 2019, 4:47 p.m. Charlotte Chung, 4, poses with the countdown jellyfish she made at the Somerset County Library System of New ...
Children develop a sense of what counting is years before they can say ”one”, “two” and “three”, scientists have discovered. Researchers found toddlers as young as 14 months who hear ...
Have you ever watched a young child count to ten? Their fingers are probably moving as the numbers go up. Don't worry parents, researchers say there is a reason why that's happening, and it's not ...
Children were given a combination of counting and number games but only some were given tasks which involved finger-training. Some of the games played included dominoes, "snap" and snakes and ladders.
When children start school, they learn how to recite their numbers (“one, two, three…”) and how to write them (1, 2, 3…). Learning about what those numbers mean is even more challenging, and this ...