Finding and making patters is a fabulous math activity to do with your young children. Patterning is tied to the study of mathematics in a number of ways:
- Patterns regularly occur in mathematics.
- Patterns can be recognized, extended, and generalized.
- The same pattern can be found/created in many different forms.
- Patterns can occur in the physical environment, and in geometric situations as well as in numbers.
- AB (A for the pink paperclip, B for the white paperclip)
- AABB (A’s for each red circle, B’s for each yellow circle)
- ABB (A for the square, B’s for the triangles)
- ABC (A for a stack of 3, B for a stack of 2, C for the single)
- AB (A for the vertical tee, B for the horizontal tee)
- ABBC (A for the white paperclip, B’s for the red paperclips, C for the green paperclip)
- Physical movements such as (clap clap snap – AAB; hop squat twirl – ABC;
- Singing tones of the scale (do mi mi –m ABB) or making general sounds (ooh aah – AB)
- red blue green red blue green red blue green
- red blue green blue red blue green blue red blue green blue
- red blue green green blue red red blue green green blue red red
- red blue green green red blue green green red blue green green
- red blue green yellow red blue green yellow red blue green yellow