Monday, January 6, 2014

How to teach skip counting

Skip counting serves as a basis for multiplication. Make math concrete with this fun activity.





A trick for making skip counting easier for students grasp and several great math book recommendations.


Within the next two months, we are planning to move (again! but just a couple of miles this time) and welcome a new family member. Obviously, I am on the look out for ways to make learning fun and easy for all of us as we jump back into kindergarten home school today.





Toward that end, a helpful friend gave us a copy of Life of Fred Apples,  by Stanley Schimdt which we have enjoyed twice. Just before Christmas, Life of Fred Butterflies arrived in the mail. Life of Fred is written by a math professor and features a math professor (of course) who is five-years-old (really!). My kids belly laugh at Professor Fred's antics, and my son is really motivated to do the exercises at the end of each chapter, in order to earn the right to progress to the next chapter. 

How to teach skip counting
Curled up on the couch with a good book. That's our idea of how to study math right now.


Schimdt jumps right in with counting by fives in Life of Fred Apples.  Now in Life of Fred Butterflies, he was asking for counting by twos.  This is a second grade skill according to Common Core, and a little tricky for my five-year-old.  I came up with this exercise to make it more concrete.

Materials needed to teach skip counting


Measuring Tape
Clothes Pins
Good books!  


Before we got started on today's activity, I read, Penguin Pairs:Counting by 2's  by Amanda Doering Tourville which we had borrowed from our local library.  

Make skip counting hands on


After we finished reading, I directed my son to begin with two and put a clothes pin on every second number. He went to work eagerly.  

As he worked, I asked, "What's that number?"  If he was not sure, I helped him get the correct name which helps us work toward our kindergarten level objective of being able to name all the numbers up to one hundred. (CCSS.Math.Content.K.CC.A.1).

A trick for making skip counting easier for students grasp and several great math book recommendations.
Smoothing the number line and pinching the markers helps the brain remember the numbers.

When he finished, he was so proud he insisted on taking a photo of his own.  

A trick for making skip counting easier for students grasp and several great math book recommendations.
A job well done!




Of course, later on, we were back to reading the quirky little five-year-old Fred. When Professor Schimdt's questions got tricky, my son was ready with his trusty number line.




More ways to work on skip counting and multiplication     


Egg Carton Skip Counting (With free printables)







2 comments:

  1. I love the way you used the measuring tape! That is really clever and a great visual. We will have to try this.

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    Replies
    1. Thanks! I hope it makes math a little more fun for you! The

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