Skills without mastery are useless. Mastery is impossible without the right methods. SimpliGrok platform makes mastery effortless and fastest with proven, smart practice.
Skills without mastery are useless. Mastery is impossible without the right methods. SimpliGrok platform makes mastery effortless and fastest with proven, smart practice.
You will read all questions aloud to the student. This topic teaches basic number name recognition and pronunciation.
Prompt: "Listen to this number: 3. Can you say it?"
You say: "I'm going to say a number, and I want you to say it back to me. Ready? The number is... THREE. Can you say three?"
Student: "Three!" (or "Fwee!" or "Tree!")
You: "Yes! Three! Great job!" [Enter response as correct - pronunciation practice is the goal]
Before children can count objects, they need to learn the names of numbers. In this topic, students practice listening to and saying number words in everyday situations. Numbers have special names - one, two, three, four, five - and children learn these through songs, stories, and conversations.
Just like people have names (Anna, Ben, Maria), numbers have names too. We use these special words to talk about how many things we have.
We use numbers all the time:
- "You're 4 years old!"
- "We have 2 hands."
- "Let's count to 10."
- "There are 3 apples."
Children learn number names by:
- Hearing adults say them
- Repeating number words
- Singing counting songs
- Saying numbers during play
Use fingers to show numbers while saying number words.
Focus on saying number names clearly:
- One
- Two
- Three
- Four
- Five
- Six
- Seven
- Eight
- Nine
- Ten
Knowing number names is the first step to counting. Once you can say "one, two, three," you can start counting objects!
You will read all questions aloud to the student. This topic teaches basic number name recognition and pronunciation.
Prompt: "Listen to this number: 3. Can you say it?"
You say: "I'm going to say a number, and I want you to say it back to me. Ready? The number is... THREE. Can you say three?"
Student: "Three!" (or "Fwee!" or "Tree!")
You: "Yes! Three! Great job!" [Enter response as correct - pronunciation practice is the goal]
Before children can count objects, they need to learn the names of numbers. In this topic, students practice listening to and saying number words in everyday situations. Numbers have special names - one, two, three, four, five - and children learn these through songs, stories, and conversations.
Just like people have names (Anna, Ben, Maria), numbers have names too. We use these special words to talk about how many things we have.
We use numbers all the time:
- "You're 4 years old!"
- "We have 2 hands."
- "Let's count to 10."
- "There are 3 apples."
Children learn number names by:
- Hearing adults say them
- Repeating number words
- Singing counting songs
- Saying numbers during play
Use fingers to show numbers while saying number words.
Focus on saying number names clearly:
- One
- Two
- Three
- Four
- Five
- Six
- Seven
- Eight
- Nine
- Ten
Knowing number names is the first step to counting. Once you can say "one, two, three," you can start counting objects!