About this deal
Use them as a hands-on way to teach early maths skills including counting, patterning, sorting, adding, estimating, sequencing, subitising, and mass comparison. Can be used in combination with both 5 and 10 frames, and is essential in teaching early mathematical concepts such as basic addition, subtraction, multiplication and division. This set has 80 Original Three Bear Family counters in 4 bright colours, 3 sizes and 3 weights, and a multilingual Activity Guide in a reusable storage bucket. These Compare Bears maths counters are perfect for helping young children act out and understand abstract math concepts. Designed to allow the counters (supplied) to fit snuggly in place so the children can hold up without losing counter With 100 double sided counters.
They also mention that the counters are lovely for other toddler games and are useful for a children's party. Bumper pack contains 250 counters in six transparent colours (blue, green, red, yellow, purple and orange).For more information on what data is contained in the cookies, please see our Cookie Information page. These famous colourful bear place value counters are great for maths teaching to help young children act out and understand abstract maths concepts including counting, sorting, size-grading, and mass comparison. These 2 Colour Counters can be used alone to aid understanding of counting, addition, subtraction, multiplication division and place value. Use as place value counters, easily writing on the values of each counter with a dry wipe pen and then simply wiping off.
These counters can be used to show mathematical equations, enabling the teaching of addition and subtraction, multiplication and division, fractions, place value and algebra. They love the bright and shiny colors and find them to be a very well made item that keeps the children entertained.
The Original Three Bear Family® also popularly known as the Compare Bears® - are an Early Years and Key Stage 1 classroom staple. Children can learn to count and associate quantities with number names; develop sorting skills by grouping the counters by colour and shape; learn about pattern and sequence by creating a line using different coloured or shaped counters; improve numeracy by adding, subtracting, dividing or multiplying groups of counters.