The meaning attached to counting is the most important idea on which all other number concepts are developed.
Counting Involves at Least Two Separate Skills:
- A child must be able to produce the standard list of counting words in order: “one, two, three, etc.” This must be learned by rote memory.
- The child must be able to connect this sequence in a one-to-one manner with the items in the set being counted. In other words, each item must get one and only one count. This important understanding is called one-to-one correspondence.
- Have the child count several sets where the number of objects is the same but the objects are very different in size. Ask the child to talk about this.
- Have the child count a set of objects, and them rearrange the objects. Ask, “How many now?” (If the child sees no reason to count again, likely the child has a good sense of number and has developed cardinality.)