Along with reciting the days of the week and the alphabet,
adults often practice reciting numbers with young children.
Now, new
research from the University of Missouri suggests reciting numbers is
not enough to prepare children for math success in elementary school.
The research indicates that counting, which requires assigning numerical
values to objects in chronological order, is more important for helping
preschoolers acquire math skills.
"Reciting means saying the numbers from memory in chronological
order, whereas counting involves understanding that each item in the set
is counted once and that the last number stated is the amount for the
entire set. When children are
just reciting, they're basically repeating what seems like a memorized
sentence. When they're counting, they're performing a more cognitive
activity in which they're associating a one-to-one correspondence with
the object and the number to represent a quantity."
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