Skip Counting
is a long, lost skill.
When modern educators thought rote drills were too monotonous,
boring and unproductive,
they stopped having the kids chant in class,
2-4-6-8-10-12…
3-6-9-12-15-18…
The multiplication tables weren’t chanted, either.
1×7=7
2×7=14
3×7=21
4×7=28
They even came up for a name for it…
“Drill and Kill.”
You can research all the arguments.
They use a lotta’ big words and catch phrases I didn’t understand,
but I know this,
some things have to be repeated over and over to be learned.
How many times have you told your kids to flush the toilet?
How many times do you go in a find a toilet full of…
well…um….ah… you find the toilet is unflushed?
My point exactly.
Repetition is good.
Anything valuable has to repeated over and over to get through their
their precious little minds.
Skip counting is valuable in addition and multiplication.
Jolanthe from Homeschool Creations
is an amazing teaching mommy.
Generous, too.
She offers many, many free printables and ideas to make your
teaching rock.
She inspires me so much I think I wanna’ be her when I grow up.
Start by printing out her
If you do this, drop a comment and thank her.
Did I tell you how amazing she is?
2,700 followers think so.
I put mine in clear page protectors in a binder,
but they could also be laminated.
Thanks to Jolanthe blogging about a great deal on a laminator,
I got one for Christmas.
Back to Skip Counting.
Here’s where my little touch comes in.
Remember how I love toys?
I really, really, really love toys.
Just like a spoonful of sugar makes the medicine go down,
toys make any lesson better.
I thought we needed Skipper to help us Skip Count.
Since we’re trying to learn the 3’s in multiplication,
we hopped through the list a few times,
counting out loud.
Then, we began working on the facts, beginning with Skipper on zero.
If I said,
2 x 3
Skipper hopped twice up to the six.
I made Rebekah repeat the problem and the product,
yea, that would be the answer in multiplication.
Skipper landed on 27.
Quick…
what math fact did I call out?
Yea, yer’ so smart, 3 x 9.
3 x 4 = 12
Yea! Got another one right.
Then you introduce the commutative property.
If 3×4 = 12
then
4×3=12.
It’s a two ‘fer one kinda’ deal.
You memorize a lot less facts when you understand this concept.
Then, just when I was really patting myself on the back about
our amazing math lesson I had presented and the blog I was gunna’ write
Skip Counting With Skipper
Rebekah said,
“But, Mom, this doll’s name is Stacie.”
Anonymous says
Love it! Thank you for sharing.Discovering Montessori
Jill says
Printed them! Thanks! Can't wait to look around her site more too. We do lots of skip counting with Saxon (lots of repetition) Love the toys, with use Polly Pockets some,, but I need to 'play' with toys more for Math. Thanks for the encouragement!
Kendra says
We are working on skip counting as well.Another lost art in math: learning to think in 10s.