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Pre Number and Number Concepts For The Young Child

Helping young children develop Number Sense lays a critical foundation for later success in mathematics. There can be as much as a three year gap when children enter kindergarten. "Number sense" develops gradually as a result of exploring numbers.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
89 views26 pages

Pre Number and Number Concepts For The Young Child

Helping young children develop Number Sense lays a critical foundation for later success in mathematics. There can be as much as a three year gap when children enter kindergarten. "Number sense" develops gradually as a result of exploring numbers.

Uploaded by

Edison Tay
Copyright
© Attribution Non-Commercial (BY-NC)
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
Download as pdf or txt
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Pre Number and Number Concepts for the Young Child

Karen Boreman Debra Rucker Co-authors of DMA (Developmental Math Assessment)

Why is Early Numeracy So Important?


Helping young children develop Number Sense lays a critical foundation for later success in mathematics. Early learning in mathematics is as vital to a students mathematical success as early literacy involvement is to a students success in reading and writing. Children enter school with signicant differences in their knowledge of early number concepts. There can be as much as a three year gap when children enter kindergarten. We usually put all children in the same program.

What is Number Sense?


Number sense is sometimes dened as having good intuition about numbers and their relationships. It develops gradually as a result of exploring numbers, visualizing them in a variety of contexts, and relating them in ways that are not limited by traditional algorithms.
(Howden, 1989)

Questions To Be Asked
1. What are the essential pre-number and early number concepts? 2. How will teachers know if children have learned the concepts? 3. What will teachers do if students have not developed the concepts?

The essential pre-number and early number concepts Assessment Activities

The Essential Pre-number Concepts Matching Sorting Comparing Ordering Subitizing

SAME
Before a child begins to match, the child needs to know how to determine when items are the same. Hold up an item and have the child find one that is the same.

MATCHING
Matching leads to understanding the concept of one-to-one correspondence. When a child passes out cookies, each child in the room gets one cookie. Maybe there are just the right amount of cookies or maybe there are extra cookies. Matching forms the basis for our number system. When a child can create the same, it then becomes possible to match two sets. This becomes a prerequisite skill for the more difficult tasks of conservation

SORTING
Children need to look at the characteristics of different items and find characteristics that are the same. Young children usually begin sorting by color before sorting by other attributes.

Comparing
Children look at items and compare by understanding difference. big/little, hot/cold, smooth/rough, tall/short, heavy/light At the preschool level children should make comparisons of more, less and same by making visual comparisons.

ORDERING
Ordering is foundational to our number system. Children have to be able to put items in an order so they are counted once and only once. Putting items in order is a prerequisite to ordering numbers. Seriation is ordering objects by size, length, or height. When giving a child directions use ordinal words (first, next, last)

Subitizing
Instant recognition of a number pattern without counting is the definition of subitizing. The pattern can be reconstructed without knowing the amount. Subitizing helps the children see small collections as one unit. This provides an early perceptual basis for number, but it is not yet number knowledge.

Subitizing
Finger Patterns Dot Patterns Domino Patterns To 6

Number Concepts
1 2 3 4 5

Words Symbols Quantity

Counting Patterns
Know single digit sequence 1 to 9 Transitions are signaled by a 9 Transition terms for the new series (29 SIGNALS 30) Rules for generating the new series Exceptions to the rules (11, 12, teens)

Chinese Perspective
Verbal Counting Sequence

The highly regular nature of the Chinese counting sequence no doubt helps to account for the fact that Chinese children have significantly less difficulty learning to count than do U.S. children. (Miller and Stigler, 1987)

Numeral 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 30 40 50 60 70 80 90

English one two three four five six seven eight nine ten eleven twelve thirteen fourteen fifteen sixteen seventeen eighteen nineteen twenty twenty-one thirty forty fifty sixty seventy eighty ninety

Chinese yi er san si wu liu qi ba jiu shi shi-yi shi-er shi-san shi-si shi-wu shi-liu shi-qi shi-ba shi-jiu er-shi er-shi-yi san-shi san-si san-wu san-liu san-qi san-ba san-jui

BENCHMARKS FOR COUNTING


Ages 2 and 3 Age 4 Age 5 Age 6 1-3 1-10 1-20 1-100 N/A Back from 5 Back from 10 Back from 20

Counting Objects in a Set


To enumerate sets of objects correctly a child must know: The number-word sequence That each object in a set is labeled with one counting word How to keep track of counted and uncounted objects so that each object is counted once and only once When counting out a smaller set from a larger set when to stop the count

SYMBOLS
BE ABLE TO BOTH RECOGNIZE AND CONSTRUCT

Distinguish among symbols Construct a mental image Look for relationships (2, 5 and 6, 9) Motor Plan

Relationships
Quantity

Developmental Math Group, 2007

RELATIONSHIPS
Typically math programs move to addition and subtraction after children have had work with word, quantity and symbol.
This leads to rote memory and nger counting. Students need to develop the following relationships which leads to the development of number sense. Taking time to build numerical relationships with students helps them develop a exible understanding of how our number system works.

Comparisons
Comparisons can be made to determine more than, bigger than, greater than, less than, smaller than,fewer than, orthe same as. Using comparison terms like these is important when children are looking for a relationship between two or morequantities. To determine more/less/same comparisons, children initially need to construct and compare sets of concrete objects.

1 or 2 More and Less


Students should be able to do all three of the following and see the relationship among the three concepts: Say the number after and the number before when given a number Count on from a given number and count back from a given number State the number that is one or two more than and one or two less than a given number These concepts give children strategies for basic facts when adding one or two onto a number or subtracting one or two from a number. Not including 0 as an addend, students would have a strategy for 32 of the 100 basic addition facts.

Visual Patterns
When we refer to visual patterns, we mean we want students to automatically recognize a dot or finger pattern for a given quantity. Mathematicians call this subitizing. It is a fundamental skill in the development ofchildren's understanding of number. When a child recognizes number patterns as both a whole (as a unit itself) and a composite of parts (individual units) a child is capable of viewing number and number patterns as a unit composed of units (Steffe, Richards & Cobb, 1983). They are able to UNITIZE.

Anchor to 5

5 frame Anchor to 10

10 frame

Part/Part/Whole and Place & Value


The ability to think about a number in terms of parts is a major achievement in the development of a childs thinking about number. (VanDeWalle 2006). Focusing on a quantity in terms of its parts has important implications for developing number sense. When children are able to think of numbers as being composed of other numbers they are able to problem solve and develop strategies for computation and other mathematical concepts.

dma
Developmental Math Assessment Observation of essential concepts Anecdotal Records Framework Longitudinal Record of Development Record of Early Numeracy (RENs) DMA (Developmental Math Assessment) Authors: Mark Carter Karen Boreman Debra Rucker www.DevelopmentalMathGroup.com PO Box 735, Hilliard, OH 43026
Phone: 614-404-5920 E-mail: [email protected]

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