finger plays – Early Math Counts https://earlymathcounts.org Laying the foundation for a lifetime of achievement Wed, 31 May 2023 12:00:02 +0000 en-US hourly 1 183791774 Fingers, Fingers, 1-2-3! https://earlymathcounts.org/fingers-fingers-123/ https://earlymathcounts.org/fingers-fingers-123/#comments Thu, 01 Jun 2023 12:00:41 +0000 https://earlymathcounts.org/?p=155374  

“Fingers, fingers, 1-2-3…how many fingers do you see?”  

We are playing one of our favorite finger games. I hide one hand behind my back. When I bring it forward, I hold up some fingers and the children shout out the number of fingers that they see.

“Three!” shout the friends playing the game.

Finger games can be played anywhere at any time because our fingers are always, well…handy! Besides, there’s a lot of math to be learned in those little fingers. Fostering a love of math in children begins with building a basic understanding of numbers.

I watch as two-year-old Jade repeatedly looks at his fingers and then back at mine as he attempts to duplicate my patterns. Children learn through their senses, and Jade is visually and physically working his way through an early math skill. He is also engaging in a sensory-motor experience that helps build abstract thinking skills.

When children engage in finger play, sing counting songs and play counting games, they are building a strong number sense. Number sense is a person’s ability to understand key math concepts such as quantities and the numbers that represent those quantities, as well as concepts such as more or less. Children with good number sense can think flexibly and fluently about numbers.

While using his fingers, Jade can feel and see the difference between the numbers 2 and 4. This developmentally appropriate math game is helping Jade connect a quantity to its numeric name—and his vocabulary is growing as he chants along with the rhyme.

Compelling new studies are also revealing how hands literally “help the brain think.” According to the website Science Translated—which educates students and the public about ongoing scientific research in a simple, jargon-free way—”Children clearly ‘think’ with their hands while learning to count.”

Neuroscientists and educators agree: Children who learn to use their fingers as a mathematical tool in the early years experience more success in math than those who don’t.

When children use their fingers to count, they are strengthening their number knowledge and their ability to visualize numbers in their minds. Counting is more complex than simply memorizing and reciting number words. Children need to understand the counting sequence, as well as one-to-one correspondence, cardinality and subitizing.

  • Counting sequence: Counting involves using the same sequence each time, starting with one.
  • One-to-One Correspondence: Exactly one number from the counting sequence is assigned to each object in the collection.
  • Cardinality: The last number assigned to an object when counting the collection indicates the total quantity of objects in the collection.
  • Subitizing: The ability to recognize a small group of objects without counting.

Watching and listening to children’s counting will help you see what they know and what they still need to learn. Once the children have a strong understanding of the numbers up to five, try adding your other hand to the game. For example, I show two fingers on my right hand and three fingers on my left hand. The children have to add the two sets of numbers to give me a total number.

“1- 2-3, let me see…the number two!”

We also use our fingers to play with shadows. Using the sun as a light source, I call out a number. The children then hold up the appropriate number of fingers to represent that number, casting “finger shadows” on a wall or on the sidewalk. 

This is a great way to help children build their number sense. It allows the children to work on:

  • Finger-isolation activities such as pointing with the index finger, counting out the fingers on their hands or wiggling all of their fingers individually
  • Thumb-opposition activities such as touching the thumb to each finger to build strength and dexterity for pencil-holding and cutting with scissors

These are all good reasons to add some finger play to your days! Keep it fun, keep it spontaneous and keep it simple. What looks like child’s play will help build a strong foundation for later math learning. You can count on that!

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Numbered Gloves https://earlymathcounts.org/numbered-gloves/ https://earlymathcounts.org/numbered-gloves/#comments Mon, 12 Oct 2015 10:57:39 +0000 http://www.mathathome.org/blog1/?p=3427 IMG_0020-2I saw these in a gift store. You can’t really tell from the picture, but they are really little, sized for a two or three-year old’s hands.  They got me thinking about using every opportunity we have to encourage numeral recognition and mathematical thinking even labeling a child’s body with letters and numbers.

Now, I can’t imagine that teachers can run out and buy these adorable little gloves, but I know that my dollar store sells the exact same gloves in solid colors for a dollar apiece.  Wouldn’t it be nice to go and get enough pairs for the children in your room, ideally in white or yellow (or another very light color) and make your own numbered gloves?  The benefits of making your own are really plentiful.

1.  Begin with the numbers 1,2, and 3 and only mark those numbers on the right glove.

2.  Have the children only wear that glove and use them while singing songs like Three Little Ducks Went Out One Day or Three Little Monkeys Jumping on the Bed, and then encourage children to not only sing the songs, but to use the appropriate finger to represent the numbers of ducks or monkeys.

3.  Provide another visual cue on each finger; i.e., dots (pip) to represent the number.

4.  Add one more clue perhaps by color coding the numbers as well; 1= red, 2= blue, etc.

Once your kids have mastered the use of 1,2, and 3, add the next numerals up to 5 and continue to include the other visual clues (pips and colors).

I might even write a large R on the right-handed glove, and an L on the left-handed glove.  This seems like a really nice and fairly easy way to provide more avenues for children to travel down as they explore early math.

If you give this a try, take some pictures and send them to me, I will put them on the blog.

 

 

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Take Away Songs https://earlymathcounts.org/take-away-songs/ https://earlymathcounts.org/take-away-songs/#comments Tue, 15 Apr 2014 10:42:05 +0000 http://www.mathathome.org/blog1/?p=2658 Simple subtraction, often called “take-away” by teachers of young children, may be best reinforced through finger plays and songs.  Children who get the most from these sorts of activities are most likely in the concrete operational stage of development.  That means using fingers or objects to illustrate mathematical operations is an appropriate way to support their understandings.

Five Little Ladybugs

Five little Ladybugs climbing up a door

One Flew away then there were four

Four Little ladybugs sitting on a tree

One flew away then there were three

Three little ladybugs landed on a shoe

One flew away and then there were two

Two little ladybugs looking for some fun

One flew away and then there was one

One little ladybug sitting in the sun

She flew away and then there were none

Using one hand – five fingers – you can illustrate the idea that

5 take away 1 equals 4 and 4 take away 1 equals 3, etc.

There are several versions of this song (5 Little Pumpkins Sitting on a Fence, Way up High in the Apple Tree, 5 Little Monkeys Jumping on the Bed) that work well and my guess is that you know most of them.

Try putting a small ladybug sticker on each of your fingers or on each of the fingers of your children.  This will help them make the connection that the fingers themselves, represent the ladybugs in the song.  I also like to use a felt board when singing songs such as these. Have one child come up at a time to remove the ladybugs (they are taking away) so they can see that take-away means less or fewer. Each time there is one less ladybug until there are none.

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