Counting Collections

Also known as: My Absolute Favorite Activity to Do with Children

What kinds of pattern and structure do you see in this picture of students counting?

“Ms. Janaki! Come look at how we counted! We put thirty on each plate and now we’re putting five more on each plate until we run out.” I don’t think I’ve ever seen students as excited in math as when we were counting collections. But beyond just excitement – the value of children counting has been well-documented.

There is appeal in the simplicity of the launch (“go count!”), the flexibility and repeatability of the task (“count in any way that makes sense to you”; “count it in a different way”), and also the complexity of the outcome and what it can teach us about how children think and reason mathematically. Not to mention strengthening the connection between concrete, physical quantities and more abstract ideas of number.

A student demonstrating two groups five make ten and using that idea to count.

At first, most kids in my class immediately started grouping by fives. I had given them collections I knew were between 200 and 500 objects, and this turned into a time-consuming and arduous task. Many did not finish counting all their objects the first time around. Part of the beauty of this task is that is an exercise in patience for the teacher, as it allows them to actually see their students’ thinking, instead of immediately pushing for accuracy and efficiency.

A student who did not finish counting but discovered that making a “rainbow” of popsicle sticks with 5 sticks of each color could allow you to count by 30s.

Students also had to navigate the social situation of counting with a partner. Some pairs of decided to count separately and combine their totals at the end – others agreed on a mutual counting strategy and played different roles in keeping track of their collection.

Counting collections authentically introduces new mathematical ideas to students. The kids from the quote at the beginning are discovering partitive division. Others were using measurement division – if we put 50 objects on each plate, how many plates will we need?

Many also began utilizing arrays – and arrays within arrays – to more quickly count their objects. Creating a seeing structure within objects and quantities is fundamental for students’ understanding of number.

But what about accuracy? What can errors tell us?

Students ambitiously create arrays to count – the first time they’ve ever done counting collections.

Students frequently made errors in counting, recording and/or calculating. It was extremely tempting as a teacher to want to see if they got the “right” number, or jump in and point out mistakes. It took a lot of practice (and will continue to take more!) to be able to know what questions to ask to prompt students to check for accuracy themselves instead of “fixing” it for them.

This student made a slight calculation error – can you figure out why?

There is also a lot of value in seeing their mistakes. A student whose count is off because as they count by tens, they write “90, 100, 101, 110” is facing a different challenge than one who’s having trouble keeping track of what they’re counting or one whose groups are not equal. Errors show how to best support each student moving forward.

Extending the task – now what?

One day, as students were counting collections, a significant number of pairs had finished counting and recording quickly while others were still diligently working. I didn’t have enough collections for students to grab a different one, so I had to think quickly – I looked around the classroom to try and find some things students could count. Here’s what I came up with.

  • Count the books in the classroom library without taking them out of their bins.
  • Count how many crayons everyone has – you can open boxes, but don’t take them out.
  • Count how many dot stickers are on these sticker sheets without removing them. (Bonus – some were torn!)
  • Count how many keys are on all the keyboards in the classroom without moving the computers (please don’t move the computers!)

This was very successful, so the next time I had students do a “choose your own adventure” and count whatever they could find in the classroom and record how they counted.

Students were able to use the way objects that were too cumbersome to move were organized to help figure out how many there were.

Some lingering questions and things of interest

  • Seeing students negotiate how to count (or whether to count) parts of objects, such as the ripped stickers or broken clothespins was very interesting.
    • I kind of want to rip/break objects in each of the collections on purpose, just to see what they’ll do with it.
  • I wonder what students would do with objects that are the same type but have differing sizes? I’m picturing a giant tub of googly eyes we had in our classroom that were all different sizes.
  • I’m still learning how to navigate the social issues that arise between partners (or what to do when the “I’m going to start throwing my objects and laughing” starts). Anybody have tips on this?

4 thoughts on “Counting Collections

  1. Thanks for this blog! Very informative. How would you recommend students do this with social distancing? I liked some of the recommendations you had but wondering if you had any further thoughts on this (especially with collaboration, sanitation, etc)

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    1. I think we are all going to have to think together about what counting collections might look like with social distancing. A lot of it is going to depend on what specific restrictions are being enforced in different places. I’m imagining maybe utilizing student-created collections – like going outside and gathering objects or bringing in objects and then disposing of them afterwards. Even if students can’t count together in the classroom (bummer!) they could still make sense of each other’s collections and represent theirs and others’ collections.

      Maybe continue to utilize counting collections at home – depending on a district’s technology access (hopefully much more equitable in the fall), perhaps students could create videos of themselves finding things to count and explaining their thinking, and watch/discuss in the classroom?

      I’m totally just brainstorming here. I’ve been thinking about this a lot and hope that together we will come up with a way to keep kids counting and counting together as much as possible.

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  2. Are all the pairs of students counting different collections of things at the same time?

    Do you then rotate and have those students count a different collection at a later date, when you count collections again?

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