Home arrow Australasian Journal of Early Childhood arrow AJEC Index/Abstracts arrow Early childhood numeracy: Building an understanding of part-whole relationships

Sponsored link
Early childhood numeracy: Building an understanding of part-whole relationships PDF Print E-mail
Jenny Young–Loveridge
University of Waikato

This paper looks at a key aspect of numeracy, quantification, the process for determining how many things are in a group. Things can be quantified by counting or by subitizing (knowing just by looking). Many mathematics educators see counting as the first step towards more advanced mathematical understanding. However, there is some evidence to suggest that, for some children, subitizing is well-established before counting. There seems to be reasonable agreement that children need to understand about the relationships between the parts and the whole (part–whole thinking). This paper looks at ways to support children's part–whole thinking in the early childhood years, and the use of egg cartons to create three-dimensional tens-frames and six-frames for this purpose. Collecting up treasures to put in the compartments of an egg carton capitalises on young children's ‘accumulation intent', and helps them to appreciate the way that numbers are composed of other numbers.

AJEC Volume 27 No 4 December 2002

You can purchase this issue of the Australian Journal of Early Childhood now.

Last Updated ( Friday, 03 September 2010 )
 

                       ECA membership

Sitemap | Help using this site | Privacy Statement | ©  Copyright 2000-11 ECA Inc | Disclaimer | Quality Assurance Guidelines| Give us feedback