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How to build your child’s numeracy skills from birth to Grade 2

​​​​​This page includes tips on how to build your child’s skills in maths and numeracy through everyday situations.

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General tips

A child’s first years are a time of rapid learning. Research tells us that babies have an innate capacity to understand numbers. As your child’s first teacher, you play a key role in developing their numeracy skills from an early age.

Developing numeracy skills early gives children an important foundation for their learning and development. It helps prepare them for daily life, including general problem-solving and handling money.

Maths includes noticing numbers, shapes, patterns, size, time and measurement. Incorporating maths into everyday experiences is easy and fun. Maths is everywhere – in the playground, at the shops and home.

Children need lots of experiences in making, counting, drawing and talking about numbers. This section will help you to build these skills in the children in your care. You may feel the maths your child is doing at their early childhood centre, kindergarten or school is different from how you were taught, but you can still support your child in many ways. Make connections for your child by explaining how numbers and counting are a part of everyday life.

Doing maths together at home

It is important for children to develop specific language skills related to maths. Visits to the playground, or helping at home, provide rich and meaningful contexts to develop these skills. it might take time for your child to use these terms and language effectively, but exposure to this mathematical talk is strong support for future learning.

Talking about maths

Counting

Counting is one of the first experiences of maths for young children.

Learning to say numbers often begins with a favourite song or rhyme and the repetition of the number names. Children will often say the numbers before they recognise and identify individual numbers.

Here are some activities and tips to engage your child with counting:

Counting every day

You can incorporate counting into everyday activities such as:

Hunting for numbers

Number hunts are a fun and engaging activity for your child. Ask your child to find numbers around you. Look at and say the numbers on car number plates, signs, calendars, newspapers, shopping catalogues, speed signs, and houses.

Using playing cards

Playing with cards is always a fun activity, particularly on a rainy day or on holidays. You can:

Playing shop

Playing shop helps ground your child’s maths learning in the real world while also developing their social skills. One way to play shop is to create a mini-shop at home. Here are a few tips and activities:

Playing games

Making maths fun and interactive by playing games will help engage your child. Here are some ideas:

Playing with shapes

Playing with shapes helps develop your child’s awareness of different shapes. It also improves their hand-eye coordination. Here are some tips and activities:

Making patterns

Recognising and making patterns are important maths skills for exploring numbers, shapes and symmetry. Activities include:

Moving with maths

These ideas use the movement of the body to experience counting:

Measuring things

Understanding measurement and scale are crucial to your child’s understanding of maths. Here are some tips and activities:

Asking questions to investigate

Ask your child questions like these to encourage them to investigate maths:

Animations to watch together

The Everyday Maths Animations encourage families to explore maths together as they walk, talk and play in everyday situations. The set of three animations support families to bring mathematics and numeracy into conversations in the home, the supermarket and outdoors.

The Mathscotsanimation series has been developed to support families engage in numeracy and to build home-school connections around mathematics learning. Following the introductory episode, there are 9 stand-alone episodes (each between one and two minutes long). Longer play versions have in-built pauses along with prompts and questions to encourage families to talk about the maths presented. There are also suggested activities that families may like to explore after watching the episodes.

Updated 26 March 2026



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