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  • Mathematical Development

     

    We want children to feel confident with numbers up to 5.
    We want them to really understand:

    • What numbers mean
    • How numbers connect to each other
    • The patterns numbers make

    To help them learn, children take part in many hands-on activities (learning by doing).

    For example:

    • Counting pebbles or counters
    • Using 5-frames (a tool to help children see numbers up to 5 clearly)
    • Playing counting games in the playground and dice board games
    • Laying the table in role play and thinking: “How many friends are coming to my party? How many plates do I need?”

    These activities help children:

    • Build strong number knowledge
    • Learn correct mathematical vocabulary (maths words)
    • Get ready for future maths learning

    Children also learn about:

    • Shapes
    • Space
    • Measuring

    This helps them develop:

    • Spatial awareness (understanding space and where things are)
    • Problem-solving skills

    They learn in a sensory, hands-on way (touching, building, exploring).

    For example:

    • Building houses with wooden blocks or Duplo
    • Comparing and measuring toy dinosaurs
    • Racing toy cars down slopes
    • Filling and emptying buckets with sand and water

    Most importantly, we want children to feel positive about maths.

    We encourage them to:

    • Look for patterns
    • Notice connections
    • Talk about their thinking
    • Try challenges
    • Understand that making mistakes is normal and helps us learn