PublishedScribble, June 2024 |
ISBN9781922585400 |
FormatBoard Book, 22 pages |
Dimensions21.7cm × 19.7cm × 2.2cm |
Discover the magical world of numbers, shapes, and geometry that surrounds you every day!
What if the way that we traditionally teach kids how to count misses the clear connections between numbers, shapes, and the world around them?
Nabeel Khan invites you to draw on your child's innate interest in geometry, patterns, and shapes as an intuitive and fun way to learn about numbers - starting their maths journey from a place of playfulness, curiosity, and tangible connection to their environment. We can find numbers and shapes everywhere- in the natural world, in art and architecture, in symbolism, and in the sky above us.
This approach is just as straightforward as 1, 2, 3, 4, but also provides kids the tools to see their world in a new way, and the agency to understand the fundamental connection between numeracy and geometry, changing their perspective for life.
Welcome to the world of magic counting!
Excellent gift for children who are more artistically inclined that will help them realise the exciting creative potential of numbers and geometry!
A brilliant tool for educators and librarians to help students to 'see' numbers and get curious about how mathematics offers a unique and mind-expanding lens with which to view our world.
'This counting book with a difference points out the shapes, patterns, and numbers that feature and recur in our lives.'
-Imogen Russell Williams, The Guardian
'Khan and Garcia celebrate numeracy in this wide-ranging exploration of ways that numbers infuse the world with meaning ... Garcia's unlined, jewel-tone illustrations take a contemporary graphic style that suits the images' accompanying captions. Occasional questions ('How many triangles can you count?') encourage both interactivity and appreciation for the 'magic' of numbers.'
-Publishers Weekly
'This elegant board book is, first, a concept book on counting, but it adds in geometric shapes and symbols to make it almost a coffee table conversation piece on mathematics ... This book clearly was a labour of love, and the pleasing gold and other tertiary colours it uses in the artwork are reason enough to pick it up. For board book afficionados who like introducing sophisticated concepts to their toddler.'
-Stephanie Tournas, Youth Services Book Review