Counting

Counting on Counting

A brief overview of the development of counting in young children. Counting is more complex than usually assumed and learning it can be challenging. Children learn some aspects of counting in their everyday lives, but benefit from intentional teaching too.  

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Counting

Herb Ginsburg Talks about Counting

Dr. Herb Ginsburg draws on his expertise on the development of mathematical thinking to detail the importance of counting for young children, the complex nature of counting, and the necessity of attending to children’s thinking as they count. 

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Counting

The Mathematics of Counting

Counting in preschool and the early elementary years supports the development of a variety of other mathematical abilities. Patterning, part-whole relationships, place value, composition and decomposition, equivalence, operations, and magnitude are all important mathematical concepts that use counting as a foundation.

by Linda M. Platas

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Counting

What Children Know and Need to Learn about Counting

This account describes how number develops in the preschool range, from about 3-5 years, and provides a detailed overview of the various skills and understandings that children need in order to achieve competence in counting. 

by Herbert P. Ginsburg

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Counting

Anna Counts

A thinking story about one child’s counting from one to 99 (she says she has to ask her mother about what comes after that). A thinking story is a written narrative presented along with embedded and carefully selected video clips–a kind of multimedia case study–that attempts to bring to life the drama of a child’s mathematical thinking.

by Herbert P. Ginsburg

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Counting

Ben Learns How to Count

Learning to count is more than memorizing the words from one to ten. Memory is crucial, but so are ideas. Ben’s example can help you understand this. 

by Herbert P. Ginsburg

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Counting

Ben Learns How Many

The idea of how many is deep, abstract, and cognitively demanding, involving learning number words and figuring out of the number of objects in a collection.  Ben illustrates learning what how many really means.

by Herbert P. Ginsburg

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Counting

Counting for Adults

In this activity prospective or practicing teachers attempt to learn to count in a foreign language (Farsi). The experience is designed to help them understand how children feel when they learn to count, and what kind of learning is involved in mastering the counting words.

by Herbert P. Ginsburg

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Counting

Exploring Your Own Thinking

This activity was developed for our graduate students (prospective early childhood teachers). It helps adults to understand how determining how many can involve many different strategies and ideas.

by Herbert P. Ginsburg & Rita Sanchez

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Counting

How to Analyze a Child’s Counting

This activity for teacher educators will help practicing and prospective teachers look carefully at the processes of interviewing and interpretation. Each of the following videos includes a voice-over commentary of a teacher conducting a clinical interview with a four-year-old girl, Angela. 

by Herbert P. Ginsburg

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Counting

Counting and Enumeration Protocol

Below are a selection of tasks you can use to determine what children know about counting. The prompts are just suggestions; consider how follow up questions requiring explanation inform your understanding of the child.

by Colleen Oppenzato & Herbert P. Ginsburg

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Counting

Formative Assessment: It Counts

A brief account of formative assessment approaches that help you learn what young children know about counting and number.

by Linda M. Platas

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Counting

Counting Collections Overview

Counting Collections is a set of activities that provides support for connecting the content of counting, children’s thinking in counting, and pedagogy in classroom practice.

by Megan Franke

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Counting

Using Picture Books: Counting

This guide discusses general principles of reading and analyzing storybooks and offers brief descriptions of storybooks that children enjoy and that can be used to teach counting.

by Colleen Uscianowski, Colleen Oppenzato, & Herbert P. Ginsburg

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Counting

“Play-Based? Math?” Vignette

A vignette about Joan and Tessa exploring how teachers learn to help their children explore math, not only through play, but also intentional teaching.

by Linda M. Platas

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Counting

“But I’m Not Good at Math!” Vignette

This is a story of participants who think that they are not good at math and are not enthusiastic about teaching it.  They learn that early math education is important and become ready to move forward in a positive way.  

by Linda M. Platas

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Counting

“Engaging Mathematics” Vignette

This is the story of two teachers who learn how to blend their insistence on high quality support for early math learning with an approach that uses children’s natural engagement in and enthusiasm for mathematics, to guide lesson planning and classroom interactions.

by Linda M. Platas

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Counting

“Play-Based? Math” Activity

This activity accompanies the “Play-Based? Math?” vignette to address beliefs and attitudes about mathematics teaching and learning in the early childhood classroom. This activity will help teachers examine their role in mathematics instruction within a play-based environment or philosophy.

by Linda M. Platas

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Counting

“But I’m Not Good at Math!” Activity

This activity addresses beliefs and attitudes about teachers’ own mathematical skills and their effects on classroom teaching. Beliefs and attitudes directly affect how teachers support mathematical development in their classrooms. These beliefs and attitudes include fear and anxiety around their own competence in mathematics and perceived lack of knowledge about mathematical development and how to support it, and beliefs about how children learn mathematics and the teacher’s role in mathematics instruction in the early childhood classroom.

by Linda M. Platas

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Counting

“Engaging Mathematics” Activity

This activity addresses beliefs and attitudes about mathematics teaching and learning in the early childhood classroom. Although unseen, beliefs and attitudes directly affect how teachers support mathematical development in their classrooms. This activity helps teachers examine their own beliefs and practices concerning the roles of children and teachers in the process of learning.

by Linda M. Platas

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Overview

Math Matters!

Why early childhood education requires attention to mathematics learning in addition to work on literacy, science, and socio-emotional development. 

by Alan H. Schoenfeld and Deborah Stipek

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Overview

Practicing the Mathematical Practices

This paper elucidates the Common Core’s vision of sound Mathematical Practices for young children, including reasoning abstractly and making sense of problems.  

by Linda M. Platas

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Counting

Additional Counting Readings

Additional readings about the development of and mathematics of counting.  Download the articles directly from this page.

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Overview

Overview of Formative Assessments

This article asserts that flexible assessment plays a central role in successful education. Flexible assessment includes careful attention to each child’s productions, close observation of their behavior, and flexible interviewing of individual children.

by Linda M. Platas

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Spatial Relations

Objects and Our Place Among Them

This article shows how different aspects of shape and space are fundamental to children’s lives. From the earliest years, as children navigate around their environment, they must learn about near and far, up and down, round and straight, and much more. Adults can help to extend and make explicit their children’s ideas about spatial relations, which is a more complex and challenging topic than usually assumed. Educators can use many different activities and approaches, including intentional teaching, to foster learning of spatial relations.

by Linda M. Platas

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Spatial Relations

Geometric Terms and Their Definitions

A useful reference of geometric terms and their definitions.

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Spatial Relations

The Mathematics of Geometry and Spatial Relations

An accessible overview of the mathematics of geometry and spatial relations. This article contextualizes this mathematics in children’s everyday lives and then provides a clear account of key concepts.  

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Spatial Relations

What Children Know and Need to Learn about Shape and Space

Although children accurately perceive shape and space in their everyday environments, preschool children need to learn to think about these topics. Our main goal should be to promote understanding of basic geometry.

by Herbert P. Ginsburg and Colleen Oppenzato

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Spatial Relations

Betsy and the Three Mathematical Bears

This 40-second video shows a young child’s understanding of spatial concepts such as in front of and behind. The video demonstrates that taking the child’s point of view can lead the adult to appreciate how an apparently wrong answer can result from sound ideas about spatial relations. The teacher needs to dig beneath the surface behavior of right and wrong answers to undercover the child’s interesting ideas. 

by Herbert P. Ginsburg

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Spatial Relations

Sawyer’s Shapes

This is an assignment completed by one of my students in which she conducted a clinical interview exploring a young child’s mathematical knowledge, used the results of this formative assessment to guide teaching, and wrote up the whole experience. 

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Spatial Relations

Formative Assessment: Shaping Up

Different approaches to learning what children know about shape and space. This article shows how participants can use observation, drawing, etc. to learn about children’s knowledge and language of geometric figures, physical and mental transformations, and spatial relations. 

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Spatial Relations

Shape Assessment Protocol

These tasks are designed to help you assess children’s concepts of shape. The protocol begins with relatively simple concepts like attributes of two dimensional shapes and ends with the analysis of solid shapes.

by Colleen Oppenzato and Herbert P. Ginsburg

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Spatial Relations

Space Assessment Protocol

These tasks are designed to help you assess a child’s understanding of spatial topics. The protocol begins with relations like over, near, next to, and the like and progresses to a child’s understanding of symmetry.

by Colleen Oppenzato and Herbert P. Ginsburg

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Spatial Relations

DLLs: Assessing Geometry and Spatial Relations

This article introduces the vital perspective that spatial relations involve both ideas and language to express and understand them. Teachers who engage with dual language learners need to be sensitive to the need to help them understand both the spatial concepts and the associated language. Integrating spatial language and concepts is a challenge for all children, but poses distinctive challenges and opportunities for dual language learners (DLLs).

by Linda M. Platas

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Overview

Math Thinking Conversations

To teach well, you need to understand the individual child’s math knowledge. This document provides guidelines for conducting conversations that can reveal a child’s math thinking and guide your teaching. Math thinking conversations do not need to take a long time. They may, for example, occur in the context of working with a small group of children. While the other children are working, the teacher can take a few minutes to engage a child in a conversation related to the task.

by Herbert P. Ginsburg

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Overview

Pedagogy of the Video Clip

Video used in teacher learning settings is a powerful tool for engaging participants in understanding children’s mathematical thinking. Yet by itself the video, no matter how wonderful, is not sufficient. This example of using video in a preservice course illustrates how teacher educators can engage participants around carefully selected video clips to promote their understanding of children’s thinking and how to assess it.

by Herbert P. Ginsburg

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Overview

Mathematical Practices Activity

This activity supports facilitating Common Core Mathematical Practices in the classroom. It provides teachers with an opportunity to explore how the Mathematical Practices work in their own lives, and how they support facilitation of the Practices with their own students.

by Linda M. Platas

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Overview

DLLs and Math in Pre-K

Supporting Dual Language learners (DLLs) in our classroom is a valuable opportunity to focus on the importance of language, think beyond the math, and provide for mathematical sense making in meaningful ways. Here are a few suggestions to make math meaningful in the classroom, not only for DLLs, but for all children.

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Overview

Who, What, Why of DLLs

This article provides some background information about dual language learners (DLLs) in early childhood classrooms in the United States.

by Linda M. Platas

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Counting

Inservice: Getting Started

As a professional developer working with preschool teachers who have had few opportunities to engage in work with others on their teaching of mathematics, I have three main goals: (1) to support them to see their strengths as teachers, so they can draw upon them when teaching mathematics; (2) to provide opportunities to understand children’s mathematical thinking; and (3) to help them learn how to “do” the work of engaging students in understanding mathematics.

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Counting

Preservice: Three Sessions

As a teacher educator working with preservice participants who are just beginning their preschool teaching careers, I have three main goals: (1) to help students draw on their own experiences in mathematics, good and bad, to create supportive mathematical learning environments for preschool children, (2) to support students in gaining knowledge about early mathematical development, and (3) to help students learn how to engage young children in rich mathematical activities.

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Counting

Inservice: Preparing for PD

As professional developers we often have little opportunity ourselves to learn more about preparing and supporting preschool teachers teach mathematics. The materials in these modules are to support you in learning more about supporting preschool teachers in mathematics. We also provide resources to use for your support. This case lays out one way you might use the materials to prepare yourself for professional development around preschool mathematics.

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Overview

Additional Overview Readings

Here are several published papers that cover relevant issues to the teaching and learning of mathematics in early childhood.

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Counting

Inservice: Initial Engagement

A short session with preschool teachers can spark their interest in how upcoming professional development work can support them in improving their practice. The session will help them see what is possible in preschool mathematics and see how possible it is for them to engage in this work. 

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Counting

Inservice: Deeper Engagement

Over a few days, preschool teachers can learn about the development of children’s counting, see how that fits with the their curricula, and learn how to embed work on counting into their practice in fun and intentional ways. 

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Counting

Professor Ginsboo: How Many?

This story is written not for children, but for prospective and practicing teachers. It takes the child’s point of view about counting and presents the adventure in an amusing manner that will draw in adults who may have some anxiety regarding mathematics.

by Herbert P. Ginsburg

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Spatial Relations

Professor Ginsboo: Shapes

This story is written not for children, but for prospective and practicing teachers. It takes the child’s point of view about shapes and presents the adventure in an amusing manner that will draw in adults who may have some anxiety regarding mathematics.

by Herbert P. Ginsburg

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Spatial Relations

Using Picture Books: Spatial Relations

Imagine that you, as a teacher, are preparing to read a book to a child or group of children and you want to use the story as an opportunity to develop understanding of shapes or spatial relations. This document describes what you might do.  

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Spatial Relations

Describe, Draw, Describe

In the activity, children are asked to view a picture (simple drawing, storybook page, complex geometrical shape, etc.), and describe what they notice in the picture. Then they draw what they see. This activity enables children with varying understandings of spatial relations to learn.

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Spatial Relations

Describe, Draw, Describe Activity

This resource provides an overview of how teacher educators can engage participants in Describe, Draw, Describe (DDD). The components have been developed to provide support for connecting children’s ideas about spatial relations and pedagogy.

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Spatial Relations

Teaching About Shape

This resource is designed to engage your participants in learning about shape.  The basic idea is to help your participants gain some insight into the challenges children face in learning about shape.

by Colleen Oppenzato and Herbert P. Ginsburg

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Spatial Relations

Additional Spatial Relations Readings

Additional readings about supporting young children to develop spatial relations understanding.  Download the articles directly from this page.

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Spatial Relations

“More Than Hearts and Diamonds” Vignette

This fictionalized but very real story of actual teacher experiences tells the story of a team-teaching effort to incorporate meaningful and important concepts in geometry and spatial relations into a project-based preschool curriculum.

by Linda M. Platas

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Spatial Relations

“When is a Triangle a Triangle?” Vignette

The story of a preschool teacher leveraging children’s ideas to engage in geometry. It addresses anxiety teachers experience when working beyond simple shapes, offering a perspective that engages participants and the children they teach.

by Linda M. Platas

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Spatial Relations

“More than Hearts and Diamonds” Activity

This activity provides participants with an opportunity to explore the attributes of 2-D geometric figures (similar to how one would engage children), and to explore their own beliefs and attitudes about supporting children’s development in geometry and spatial relations. 

by Linda M. Platas

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Spatial Relations

“When is a Triangle a Triangle?” Activity

This activity provides participants with an opportunity to explore their comfort level and fears around teaching geometry and spatial relations.  

by Linda M. Platas

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Operations

Preservice: Two Sessions

These guidelines can provide six or more hours on early mathematics (focus on shapes and spatial relations) in a three-unit semester preschool curriculum course. It can be broken into shorter segments. 

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Spatial Relations

Additional Spatial Relations Videos

More video resources related to the development of spatial relations, including map making and reasoning about shapes

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Spatial Relations

Inservice: One Session on Spatial Relations

A short session around spatial relations can support moving beyond thinking about spatial relations as identifying the shapes, expanding their conceptualization of spatial relations and helping them see opportunities to support learning. 

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Spatial Relations

Inservice: One Session on Shapes

Children often describe characteristics of shapes using their informal out-of-school language. We want to encourage participants to elicit children’s informal knowledge and language around the shapes and move them to being as specific as possible.

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Spatial Relations

Inservice: Going Deeper with Spatial Relations

Often in professional development settings it is productive to anchor the content of the day around one activity designed for children.  Within the context of the activity, we can engage participants as learners themselves, explore ideas of children’s mathematical thinking within specific content areas, and discuss how the activity can be used in classrooms.  This one-day session for practicing teachers explores spatial relations through the activity Describe, Draw, Describe

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Operations

Counting on Operations

Children have intuitive ideas about operating on number from a very early age. This piece helps us begin to think about the ways in which young children encounter operations in their day-to-day interactions.

by Linda M. Platas

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Operations

Beginning with Multiplication and Division

Multiplication and division are often considered to be too mathematically complex for young children. However, we see that young children engage in multiplicative reasoning as they play and that their early engagement in grouping provides a foundation for operations.

by Linda M. Platas

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Operations

Professor Ginsboo: Operations

This story is written not for children, but for prospective and practicing teachers. It takes the child’s point of view about operations and presents the adventure in an amusing manner that will draw in adults who may have some anxiety regarding mathematics.

by Herbert P. Ginsburg

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Operations

The Mathematics of Operations

An accessible overview of the mathematics of operations. Patterning, decomposition, place value, and equivalence are all key ideas underlying an understanding of operations.

by Linda M. Platas

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Operations

Ben Learns How to Add

Addition can grow directly out of children’s experience with counting objects.  Ben illustrates how a young child adds.

by Herbert P. Ginsburg

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Operations

Does Charlotte Understand Addition and Mathematical Symbols?

This is a Math Thinking Story about a five-year-old preschool girl, who was interviewed towards the end of the school year in May. Here we explore her understanding of addition and mathematical symbols.

byHerbert P. Ginsburg

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Operations

Ethan and the Rocks: One-to-One and Fairness

This video of four-year-old Ethan illustrates how young children engage in mathematics in real-life situations as he distributes rocks “fairly” using one-to-one correspondence. 

byHerbert P. Ginsburg

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Operations

Analyzing One’s Own Thinking to Learn About Children’s

One of our main goals is to help participants understand the importance of assessing children’s thinking. The activity described here engages participants in an analysis of their own thinking as they solve math problems.

by Herbert P. Ginsburg

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Operations

Analyzing the Thinking Underlying Wrong Answers

One of our main goals is to help participants understand the importance of assessing children’s thinking. This activity engages participants in bug detection and analysis; that is, figuring out the thinking that may underlie incorrect answers.

by Herbert P. Ginsburg

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Operations

Formative Assessment: It Adds Up

A brief account of formative assessment approaches that help you learn what young children know about operations.

Linda M. Platas

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Operations

Using Picture Books: Addition and Subtraction

Imagine that you, as a teacher, are preparing to read a book to a child or group of children and you want to use the story as an opportunity to develop understanding of addition and subtraction. This document describes how you might proceed.

by Colleen Uscianowski and Herbert P. Ginsburg

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Operations

“Context Matters” Vignette

A vignette about teachers Makayla and Jaden draw on their knowledge of “development” to consider if children’s understanding of operations has an “order” to it.

by Linda M. Platas

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Operations

“Context Matters” Activity

This activity provides participants with an opportunity to explore children’s development in operations as children solve problems that arise through play and interactions throughout the day.

by Linda M. Platas

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Operations

“Fair Sharing and Sharing Fairly” Vignette

Mathematics, specifically number and operations, is at the heart of the intensely social interactions of fair-sharing. In attempts to make our classrooms engaging but calm, we frequently underestimate children’s abilities in both mathematics and social relations.

by Linda M. Platas

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Operations

“Fair-Sharing and Sharing Fairly” Activity

This activity provides participants with an opportunity to explore children’s early abilities in fair-sharing and to explore their own beliefs and attitudes about supporting children’s mathematical and socio-emotional development.

by Linda M. Platas

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Operations

Extending Counting to Operations: Getting Started

The following activity helps participants notice and support children’s sense-making about the actions involved in the operations: joining, separating, comparing and even grouping (multiplication and division).

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Operations

Extending Counting to Operations: Archie & Caro

Attending to the nuance of children’s responses enables teachers to figure out what children understand and what questions and supports can help them extend their thinking. Figuring out which questions to ask, which tasks to pose, and which tools to offer is often the most challenging aspect of teaching mathematics. This activity engages participants in both attending to the details of children’s ideas and working on how to support children to think more deeply.

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Operations

Supporting Counting to Problem Solving

This handout explores building on how young children count collections of objects to support them to reason about solving problems that involve operations. 

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Operations

Classroom Videos: Operations

More video resources related to the development of operations and how teachers can engage young children in operations

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Spatial Relations

Preservice: Two Sessions

These guidelines can provide 6+ hours on early mathematics, specifically operations, in a 3-unit semester preschool curriculum course. It is broken into two segments, but can be broken into shorter segments.

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Operations

Beginning Strategies for Problem Solving

This piece explores the intuitive strategies that young children use to solve addition, subtraction, multiplication, and division problems.

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Operations

Inservice: Building on Counting

These guidelines can provide three or more hours on extending counting to operations.  It builds on participants’ knowledge of Counting Collections.

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Operations

What Children Know and Need to Learn about Operations

Here is a brief account of how an understanding of the operations develops in the preschool years. Young children’s understanding of the operations develops out of their understanding of counting. For a complete account of what children need to learn about counting, see What Young Children Know and Need to Learn about Number.

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Operations

Inservice: Introducing +, – , x , ÷

Getting started with solving addition, subtraction, multiplication, and division problems begins by asking teachers to rethink their existing ideas of teaching the operations and providing opportunities for teachers to see that children can solve problems without being taught the symbols, number facts, or number sentences. 

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Operations

Making Sense of Problem Types

Considering how a young child would intuitively approach word problems helps us to explore the range of problem types within addition, subtraction, multiplication, and division.

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Operations

Engaging Participants around Problem Types

We describe some ways you might engage participants in these problem types to help them see the range of problems, how they might be easier or more difficult for young children, and how young children would solve them.

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Counting

Additional Counting Videos

More video resources related to the development of counting and how teachers can engage young children in counting

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Patterns & Algebra

Pattern Paths To Algebra

A brief overview of the development of patterns and algebraic thinking in young children. Children are born with the ability to detect patterns and our support in the classroom builds on this important skill.

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Patterns & Algebra

What in the World is a Pattern Unit?

Ever wonder what a pattern unit is and why it is important? Here’s your chance to find out!

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Patterns & Algebra

Patterns of Counting Words

Children can learn surprisingly sophisticated patterns related to the counting words. In this handout, Anna illustrates her understanding of the decades pattern in the English-language counting-word sequence.

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Patterns & Algebra

Growing Patterns

Children are interested in order at an early age. When order has regularity (that is, size increases by a specific amount each time), the order becomes a pattern. This handout illustrates examples of this particular kind of pattern, called growing patterns.

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Patterns & Algebra

Pattern, Pattern, Everywhere

The environment constantly exposes young children to regularities of various types: in music, shirts, dance, shape, and spatial relations. Given these experiences, children ages three through six years old develop an intuitive understanding of pattern. The goal of this article is to show how children develop intuitive pattern knowledge in everyday life. 

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Patterns & Algebra

Patterns and Algebraic Thinking

Can young children do algebra? This resource illustrates the links between algebraic thinking and patterns.

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Patterns & Algebra

Patterns in Everyday Activities

There are many daily-life activities in which children engage with mathematical patterns. This handout describes some of these activities.

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Patterns & Algebra

What is a Pattern?

Patterns can be notoriously difficult to define. This handout provides illustrations of teacher-child interactions that help take apart (and put back together!) patterns to support our understanding of pattern

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Patterns & Algebra

Thinking Outside the ABAB Box

Ever wonder how a pattern identification activity and a pattern extension activity differ? Explore these terms and more!

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Patterns & Algebra

The Mathematics of Patterns and Algebra

This article explains the basic math underlying the patterns that children encounter in their everyday lives and in preschool. . One key concept is the generalization of patterns: the ability to apply a pattern (e.g., ABAB) to multiple materials and contexts. Other concepts covered include copying, extending, and creating patterns.

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Patterns & Algebra

Formative Assessment: Spotting Patterns

A brief account of formative assessment approaches that can help you identify what young children know about patterns.

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Operations

Additional Operations Videos

More video resources related to the development of operations and how teachers can engage young children in operations.

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Patterns & Algebra

Assessing Children’s Knowledge of Pattern

There are all types of patterns. This handout describes a variety of these patterns and how to assess children’s increasingly sophisticated knowledge of this important mathematical domain.

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Patterns & Algebra

“What Do You Notice?” Vignette

This is the story of how Teachers Steph and Maria found out what children notice about patterns and why that matters.

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Patterns & Algebra

“When is a Pattern a Caterpillar?” Vignette

Patterns have long been a part of preschool curricula. But, what is a pattern? How do we go beyond simple ABAB patterns? And how do we keep children engaged? Georgia takes on these issues, with the help of little Aline.

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Patterns & Algebra

What Children Know and Need to Learn about Patterns and Algebraic Thinking

What do we mean by pattern? Can young children engage in algebraic thinking to understand patterns? How should we help young children to think about and understand patterns? 

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Patterns & Algebra

Professor Ginsboo: Patterns

This story is written not for children, but for prospective and practicing teachers. It takes the child’s point of view about patterns and presents the adventure in an amusing manner that will draw in adults who may have some anxiety regarding mathematics.

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Patterns & Algebra

“Copying and Detecting Aren’t the Same Thing” Vignette

How Teacher Julia and Teacher Isaac reengaged children in pattern activities, but lost the pattern unit! Getting back on track with patterns.

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Patterns & Algebra

Teaching Algebraic Thinking to Young Children

This resource is designed to engage your participants in learning about patterns and algebraic thinking. The activities are similar to those your participants can use in teaching children, but are more complex and demanding. The basic idea, (one often used in teacher workshops) is to help your participants gain some insight into the challenges children face in learning about patterns and algebra, as well as to explore different representations of the same pattern. 

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Patterns & Algebra

Pattern and Algebra Assessment Protocols

These tasks are designed to help you assess an individual child’s understanding of patterns. The protocol begins with relatively simple concepts such as recognizing and completing repeating patterns and moved on to more advanced concepts like growing patterns. 

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Patterns & Algebra

Additional Patterns & Algebra Videos

Additional videos related to how teachers support children’s learning of patterns and algebra.

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Patterns & Algebra

What Do You Notice?

Supporting children to notice and describe what they notice is a productive way for teachers to leverage the ways in which children naturally find pattern in the world around them. This resource provides an overview of how teacher educators can engage teachers in this idea.

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Measurement & Data

Measurement Assessment Protocol

These tasks are designed to help you use the clinical interview to assess an individual child’s understanding of measurement. The protocol begins with relatively simple measurement tasks that rely on perception and advances to more complex tasks requiring measuring in units, although you can pick and choose among them. They do not need to be given in order.

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Measurement & Data

Measurement Assessment Videos

This page consists of video clips that are designed to illustrate assessing students using the measurement assessment protocol.

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Measurement & Data

Life is a Sort of Data Gathering Activity

We often think of graphs and charts when we think of data. But children collect data all the time without them. This handout describes the ways in which humans use data throughout their lives.

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Measurement & Data

Measuring Up

Measurement in early childhood involves important mathematical concepts that can be supported in the preschool classroom through children’s everyday problem solving. This handout provides insights into children’s development in this important domain and gives examples of classroom applications.

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Measurement & Data

The Mathematics of Measurement

The following handout presents an accessible overview of the mathematics of measurement. It provides important information on the foundations of measurement and ideas for supporting development of measurement skills in the preschool classroom.

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Measurement & Data

What Children Know and Need to Know about Measurement and Estimation

What is measurement? It is the process of accurately determining the extent, amount, or quantitative value of an attribute such as length, weight, volume, or area. When you think of measurement, you probably think about measuring in feet or pounds. But measurement is more than that. In this handout, we first consider the basic concepts that form the foundation of measurement, then we examine exact measurement, and finally we discuss estimation. We focus on length, which is very salient for young children, but also touch upon temperature, distance, and time. Many of the concepts we discuss will not be fully mastered in preschool, but preschool children can develop the foundational knowledge that they will continue to build on through the elementary school grades.

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Measurement & Data

Professor Ginsboo: Measurement

This story is another approach to explaining the mathematics of measurement. It is written not for children, but for prospective and practicing teachers. It presents the adventure in an amusing manner that will draw in adults who may have some anxiety about or disinterest in mathematics.

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Measurement & Data

A Thinking Story about Seriation and Measurement

Children need to understand some basic mathematical ideas in order to measure accurately. First, they need to know what Goldilocks knows (as revealed by my extensive clinical interview with her), namely that Baby Bear is smaller than Momma Bear and Momma Bear is smaller than Poppa bear; and also that Momma is at the same time smaller than Poppa Bear and larger than Baby Bear. Children also need to learn what Goldilocks does not yet know, namely how to measure the bears exactly. How much smaller is Baby Bear than Momma Bear? And what is this smallness anyway? Is Baby Bear shorter, or less voluminous (skinnier), or lighter, and by how much exactly?.

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Measurement & Data

Taking Measure of Measurement

You’ve been counting regularly in your classroom and you’ve decided to start including activities that encourage children to delve into the exciting world of measurement. This handout discusses some important differences between counting and measuring, and how to talk about measurements that aren’t exact.

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Measurement & Data

“Children’s Words Measure Up” Vignette

A story in which Teachers Emily and Alondra learn from Zobeir about the importance of vocabulary for both teachers and children, and how the “right” word isn’t the goal.

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Measurement & Data

“To Calendar or Not to Calendar” Vignette

A story of how Teachers Angela and Patrick learned from the children about calendar activities.

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Measurement & Data

Using Picture Books: Measurement

Imagine that you, a teacher, are preparing to read a book to a child or group of children and you want to use the story as an opportunity to develop their understanding of measurement. This document describes how you might proceed.

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Measurement & Data

“To Calendar or Not to Calendar” Activity

This activity explores the uses of calendar activities with preschoolers. It will help teachers examine the appropriateness of calendar activities in meeting developmental and learning goals, as well as addressing children’s interests.

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Measurement & Data

The Mathematics of Data

We know data involves math, but what does data’s math look like? This handout explores mathematics and representations used when working with data.

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Measurement & Data

What Children Know and Need to Know about Data

What do children need to know in order to use data? This handout describes:

1. The foundational concepts of data,
2. The importance of context in understanding the questions and problems that data can solve, and
3. how young children can represent and interpret data.

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Measurement & Data

Formative Assessment: Measurement

Children compare and measure all the time in the classroom. How can we assess their knowledge in this important area of mathematics? This handout provides suggestions for improving our awareness of children’s understanding of measurements.

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Measurement & Data

Classroom Videos: Measurement & Data

More video resources related to how teachers can engage young children in measurement and data

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Measurement & Data

I’m the Greatest: A Measurement Activity

This resource is designed to engage your participants in learning about measurement. Notions of big and little and biggest and littlest permeate children’s play and preschool learning. However, deciding which object is biggest or littlest depends on which attribute (height, width, capacity, or weight) a child is considering. In this activity, participants are given various objects and asked to make a case that their object is “the greatest” in some way.  

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Measurement & Data

Formative Assessment: Data

How do we assess what children know about collecting data and using it to answer questions and solve problems? This handout describes a variety of ways to explore children’s knowledge about data and its uses.

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Counting

Classroom Videos: Counting

More video resources related to the development of counting and how teachers can engage young children in counting

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Spatial Relations

Classroom Videos: Spatial Relations

More video resources related to the development of spatial relations and how teachers can engage young children in spatial relations

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Measurement & Data

“Time in Due Time” Vignette

A story of how teachers Angela and Patrick observe the children in their classroom and notice them using time and time tools throughout their day.

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Measurement & Data

Bella and the Cubes: A Measurement Mystery

Although they perceive length at an early age, children have difficulty measuring it. To do so, they need to learn several basic mathematical concepts, like the idea of a constant, conventional unit of measurement.This handout describes challenges children face as they learn to measure lengths using non-conventional units (in this example, connecting cubes), and those faced by interviewers in trying to determine what children understand about measurement.

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Measurement & Data

Leveraging Observation Data

Often when working with data in preschool, teachers collect or ask children to collect survey data (months of birthdays, favorite color). The activity described here will help teachers to consider how to use observation data to promote engagement and learning in mathematics in ways that are authentic, purposeful, and interesting for students.

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Measurement & Data

Data Assessment Videos

This page consists of video clips that are designed to illustrate assessing students using the data assessment protocol.

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Measurement & Data

Data Assessment Protocol

These tasks are designed to help you assess a child’s understanding of data. The protocol begins with sorting and reading simple graphs and moves on to creating graphs.

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Measurement & Data

Additional Measurement Readings

Additional readings about the supporting the development of measurement.  Download the articles directly from this page.

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Patterns & Algebra

Inservice: Getting Started with Patterns

The initial 2-hour session focuses on supporting participants to notice patterns in their environment and consider what young children may notice. The second 2-hour session focuses on deepening understanding of what a pattern is, and what we want preschool children to understand about pattern.

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Patterns & Algebra

Preservice: Understanding Pattern Units

As a pre-service teacher educator working with students who are just beginning their preschool teaching careers, I have three main goals: (1) help students draw on their own experiences in mathematics, good and bad, to create supportive mathematical learning environments for preschool children; (2) support students in gaining knowledge about early mathematical development; and (3) help students learn how to engage young children in rich mathematical activities

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Measurement & Data

Inservice: Non-Standard or Standard?

As a pre-service teacher educator working with students who are just beginning their preschool teaching careers, I have three main goals: (1) help students draw on their own experiences in mathematics, good and bad, to create supportive mathematical learning environments for preschool children; (2) support students in gaining knowledge about early mathematical development; and (3) help students learn how to engage young children in rich mathematical activities.

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Measurement & Data

Preservice: One Session on Data

The following activities can be enacted in one class session or broken into two shorter sessions. Participants should have a good grasp of number development in children in order to benefit optimally from this session.

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Overview

Ideas for Engaging Participants

This resource provides a range of ideas that may be useful for teacher educators as they design their professional development sessions and early childhood courses.  

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Counting

Going Deeper with Collections

This resource provides additional activities to support participants to engage more deeply with the activity of Counting Collections.

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Patterns & Algebra

Teaching Algebraic Thinking to Young Children: In Action

We describe a way to engage participants in learning about patterns and algebraic thinking in Teaching Algebraic Thinking to Young Children. Here is a description of how we used the activity as part of a university course.

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Spatial Relations

Teaching About Shape: In Action

Here is a detailed description of one round of the Shape Touch activity described in Teaching about Shape.

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Overview

Overview of Executive Functioning and Math

This resource provides an overview of the connections between executive functioning (EF) and mathematics.

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Measurement & Data

Supporting Executive Functioning through Measurement

This resource explores connections among executive functioning (EF) and measurement and provides tips for early childhood educators to support EF while engaging in measurement.

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Counting

Supporting Executive Functioning During Counting

This resource explores connections among executive functioning (EF) and counting and provides tips for early childhood educators to support EF while engaging in counting.

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Spatial Relations

Supporting Executive Functioning Through Geometry and Spatial Relations

This resource explores connections among executive functioning (EF) and geometry and spatial relations and provides tips for early childhood educators to support EF while engaging in and geometry and spatial relations.

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Patterns & Algebra

Supporting Executive Functioning Through Patterns

This resource explores connections among executive functioning (EF) and patterns and provides tips for early childhood educators to support EF while engaging in patterns.

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Operations

Supporting Executive Functioning Through Operations

This resource explores connections among executive functioning (EF) and mathematical operations and provides tips for early childhood educators to support EF while engaging in operations.

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Operations

Addition and Subtraction Assessment Protocol

These tasks are designed to help you assess children’s concepts of addition and subtraction.  The protocol begins with concrete addition and subtraction and moves on to operations with symbols.

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Operations

Addition and Subtraction Assessment Videos

This page consists of video clips that are designed to illustrate assessing students using the addition and subtraction assessment protocol. Please visit the Addition and Subtraction Assessment Protocol for more details.

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Spatial Relations

Shape Assessment Videos

This page consists of video clips that are designed to illustrate assessing students using the shape assessment protocol. Please visit the Shape Assessment Protocol for more details.

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Counting

Counting and Enumeration Assessment Videos

This page consists of video clips that are designed to illustrate assessing students using the measurement assessment protocol. Please visit the Counting and Enumeration Assessment Protocol for more details.

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Spatial Relations

Space Assessment Videos

This page consists of video clips that are designed to illustrate assessing students using the shape assessment protocol. Please visit the Space Assessment Protocol for more details.

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Overview

How to Use Picture Books

Imagine that you, a teacher, are preparing to read a book to a child or group of children and you want to use the story as an opportunity to develop their understanding of math. This document contains some general tips for doing this.

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Patterns & Algebra

Using Picture Books: Patterns

Imagine that you, as a teacher, are preparing to read a book to a child or group of children and you want to use the story as an opportunity to develop understanding of patterns. This document describes what you might do.

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Overview

Connecting Home and School Mathematics

This resource explores three projects that can help your participants understand and build home-school connections into their mathematics teaching practice. Engaging in these projects might also help your participants uncover potential biases and incorrect assumptions they might have about children’s ability to learn math, as well as their families’ capacity to support them.

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Overview

Analyzing Picture Books: An Overview

This piece discusses general principles of reading and analyzing storybooks, and offers brief descriptions of picture books. It describes how to use the Math Picture Book Analysis Guide with pre-service or in-service teachers.  

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Measurement & Data

Additional Measurement and Data Videos

This page features more video resources related to the development of measurement and data and how teachers can engage young children in measurement and data.

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Patterns & Algebra

Pattern and Algebra Assessment Videos

This page consists of video clips that are designed to illustrate assessing students using the pattern and algebra assessment protocol. Please visit the Pattern and Algebra Assessment Protocol for more details.

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Overview

Using Unedited Videos in Your Courses

There are several ways in which you can use Thinking Stories about children’s mathematical thinking and/or corresponding unedited videos in your teaching, in a live class or on-line. Here are some simple exercises to accompany unedited videos either before examining them in class or before reading the corresponding Thinking Story. 

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Overview

Bakersfield College CHDV B26: Science, Art, and Mathematics

This resource incorporates a variety of DREME TE resources to meet student learning outcomes for the math portion of the Bakersfield College CHDVB26 : Science, Arts & Mathematics class. 

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Overview

College of the Sequoias: Math in the ECE Classroom Workshop

Support early math learning in your preschool classroom by understanding practical strategies that can be used to support children’s success in math, while gaining confidence for yourself as a capable math teacher!

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Overview

Supporting Language and Math

Drawing attention to supporting the math learning of dual language learners (DLLs) provides an opportunity for teacher educators to engage participants in exploring in-depth the relationship between language and mathematics in early learning settings. This resource highlights DREME TE materials that can be used in a variety of ways to support a focus on language and math.

By Angela Chan Turrou and Karen Recinos

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