Tuesday, 20 January 2015

Maths Meeting Notes


Many thanks to those of you who attended our maths meeting this morning , we appreciate that some people may not be able to attend through family or work commitments and so we are attaching the Power Point slides.
If you have any questions regarding the teaching of maths in Foundation Stage please do not hesitate to ask us .
Thank you 




Mathematics in the EYFS



It involves providing opportunities to practise and improve children's skills in:- 
Counting numbers
Calculating simple addition and subtraction problems
 Describing shapes, space and measure


Two Early Learning Goals taken from the EYFS Curriculum Document 2012


1.Numbers
Count reliably with numbers from 1-20
Place them in order
Say which number is one more or one less than a given number
Using quantities and objects, add and subtract two single-digit numbers and count on or back to find the answer
They solve problems, including doubling, halving and sharing


2. Shape, space and measures
Children use everyday language to talk about size, weight, capacity, position, distance, time and money to compare quantities and objects
Solve problems
They recognise, create and describe patterns
They explore characteristics of everyday objects and shapes and use mathematical language to describe them


What do we do in school?


We make mathematics fun 
We call children ‘mathematicians’
We make activities as practical and interactive as possible
We relate mathematics to real life situations
We encourage children to solve problems
We encourage children to explain their workings
We explain that we can learn from our mistakes.





Skills in early addition
Counting all – a child doing 2+ 3 counts out two bricks and then three bricks and then finds the total by counting all the bricks.
Counting on from the first number – a child finding 3 +5 counts on from the first number ‘four, five six, seven, eight’.
Counting on from the larger number – a child chooses the larger number, even when it is not the first number, and counts on from there.


Skills in early subtraction

Counting out – a child finding  9 – 3 holds up nine fingers and folds down three.
Counting back from – a child finding  9 – 3 counts back three number from 9: ‘eight, seven, six’.
Counting back to – a child doing 11 -7 counts back from the first number to the second, keeping a tally using fingers of the number of numbers that have been said, ‘ten, nine, eight, seven’, holding up four fingers.


Strategies for memorising


Kinaesthetic - this involves memorising through movement, learning by matching facts to specific ways of moving, such as finger counting or action sequences.
Visual - some children have a good visual memory, and can ‘see’ facts on the page/board.
Aural - some children remember things by ‘hearing’ them repeated. Chanting the sequence of numbers, matching facts to rhymes, songs or music.

Written – writing something can help the facts travel from the pen to the ‘brain! Children can see how the facts connect together when they are presented in written form, 3+2=5, 2+3=5.
Pattern - some children find it easier to recall facts when they understand the structure of patterns in which they are embedded, dots on  dominoes or dice.




We hope you will find the Maths Activities sheet we sent home useful- why not try one of the activities at home and your child can come and tell us all about it!

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