I'm so glad I made these because I got to play math with littles. I learned that I am sorely lacking giggles in my life. I played on the floor of a conference center, at a cafe, and in a living room. So I can attest to the fact that these are great portable toys. Soraya, Jenna, and I played for almost an hour and only stopped because we wanted to go to the park before it rained. She played more, and in different ways the very next day. I love it when the best case scenario you imagine is surpassed by reality!
The things they've played:
- Match my shape.
- Sort all the shapes.
- Name my shape. (Some are standard shapes but others are flowers or snowflakes. Which leads to - what's the difference between a flower and a snowflake?)
- Can you find a ____? (Green shape? Square? Green square?)
- Put things in the pocket and take them out.
- Move the beads so the top row matches the bottom.
- Count the beads.
- Count the shapes.
- How many ____? (Count, cover, how many are hidden? How many more to fill the squares?)
- Comparisons (are there more purple or green?)
- Decorate mom with the shapes.
- Put the shapes in the ten frame.
- Make a pattern in the ten frame.
The one complaint:
Jenn's kiddo, Z, kept asking her to cut off the beads so she could make more patterns. While I won't remove them entirely, because I'm confident eventually Z will find cool things to do with them, I do want to make them less floppy so they won't get in the way. Added bonus: they're currently made by threading beads onto braided yarn which is omg so tedious. My upgrade is to use pipe cleaners which will make my life so much easier! Plus it's easy for adults to take the pipe cleaners off the mat if anyone else demands it and then put them back later.
Can you see the concentration? These people are doing math. (Z, Soraya, and Shelby's kiddo)
Trajectories:
I would love to see what happens with these toys at different ages. The difference between an almost 3 year old and an almost 3.5 year old was noticeable (yes, I know, tiny sample size). While I'm no expert in the trajectory of learning to count, I have done enough reading about it to know that the answers to all of these questions are different:
- Can they count the shapes in a pile?
- Can they count the shapes organized in a ten frame?
- Can they count the beads by pointing to each one?
- Can they count the beads by sliding each one?
Seeing where kids are and how they grow is so fun. Another place for growth was one kiddo could find me a square, and could find me a green shape, but finding a green square was too much. I hadn't thought about how much harder searching for two characteristics simultaneously was until I was gifted a green shape that wasn't a square!
Fave tweet:
“Mama mama! I neeed you to tell me where you put the present from your friend Miss Tina! I NEEED to make the patterns!”— Jennifer White (@JennSWhite) May 12, 2019
Warms my heart. Thanks again @crstn85 pic.twitter.com/H3QdqsQjIy
So what's next? I'm definitely going to try the pipe cleaner method for the rekenreks, and I'm playing with different methods to get the ten frame on there because sewing isn't my favorite and I'd like that part to look cleaner. If I can come up with a quick way to outline the ten frame and attach the rekenreks then I'd love to make a whole bunch of these and bring them to something like toddler play time at the library. I could also send them to you, dear reader, if you have a kiddo in your life, a classroom full of them, or you're a kid at heart. Because lets be honest sensory play with felt shapes is fun for everyone! I do recommend playing together though, as the potential for giggles is much higher. And we could all use more giggles in our life.
Update: my new version worked out so there's now a website for these things: tinacardone.com/math-play-mat
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