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.
Read questions aloud. Scatter objects (not in a line!) for student to count (up to 7).
Materials: 10 small counters
How to use: Toss or scatter counters on table, ask "How many?", student counts (this is harder!). Teach strategies: move each object as counted, OR point carefully, OR count in a pattern (left to right). Key idea: arrangement doesn't change the total.
So far, we've practiced counting objects in lines or organized groups. But in real life, objects aren't always neatly arranged! Scattered counting means counting objects that are spread out, mixed up, or arranged in different ways.
Most things we count aren't in perfect lines:
- Toys scattered on the floor
- Crackers on a plate
- Flowers in a garden
- Stars in the sky
- Books on a messy desk
- Coins in a piggy bank
Example: Counting scattered blocks
- Touch first block, say "1", move it to new pile
- Touch second block, say "2", move it
- Continue until all blocks are in the new pile
Once you're good at scattered counting:
- You're ready to compare groups (which has more?)
- You can understand adding and taking away
- You've developed flexible number sense
- You're ready for more advanced counting!
Great work learning to count scattered objects!
Read questions aloud. Scatter objects (not in a line!) for student to count (up to 7).
Materials: 10 small counters
How to use: Toss or scatter counters on table, ask "How many?", student counts (this is harder!). Teach strategies: move each object as counted, OR point carefully, OR count in a pattern (left to right). Key idea: arrangement doesn't change the total.
So far, we've practiced counting objects in lines or organized groups. But in real life, objects aren't always neatly arranged! Scattered counting means counting objects that are spread out, mixed up, or arranged in different ways.
Most things we count aren't in perfect lines:
- Toys scattered on the floor
- Crackers on a plate
- Flowers in a garden
- Stars in the sky
- Books on a messy desk
- Coins in a piggy bank
Example: Counting scattered blocks
- Touch first block, say "1", move it to new pile
- Touch second block, say "2", move it
- Continue until all blocks are in the new pile
Once you're good at scattered counting:
- You're ready to compare groups (which has more?)
- You can understand adding and taking away
- You've developed flexible number sense
- You're ready for more advanced counting!
Great work learning to count scattered objects!