🔢Number Quest
They count everything. Stairs, grapes, dogs in the park. Numbers are starting to mean something — not just words in order, but tools for understanding how many, how much, how big.
What's actually happening
Mathematical thinking in early childhood is not about memorising number sequences — it's about developing 'number sense': an intuitive understanding of quantity, comparison, and relationships. Clements & Sarama (2014) found that children who developed strong number sense before school entry showed sustained mathematical advantages through primary school. Early maths ability is actually a stronger predictor of later academic achievement than early reading ability (Duncan et al., 2007). Yet many children develop maths anxiety as early as age 5, often transmitted from parents' own mathematical discomfort (Maloney et al., 2015).
What parents usually try
Drilling number sequences
Rote counting ("1, 2, 3...") is different from number sense. A child who counts to 20 but can't tell you which is more — 7 or 4 — has memorised a sequence without understanding quantity (Clements & Sarama, 2014).
Worksheets and flashcards
Abstract representation too early can create negative associations. Young children develop mathematical understanding through concrete, hands-on experiences before moving to symbols (Piaget, 1952).
Transmitting their own maths anxiety
Parents who express maths anxiety ('I was never good at maths') transmit it to their children. Maloney et al. (2015) found that this effect was strongest in homework-helping situations.
What actually helps
The story embeds mathematical thinking in a narrative context where numbers solve real problems. The child doesn't do 'maths' — they figure out how many apples a dragon needs, or which bridge is long enough. Clements & Sarama (2014) call this 'mathematising' — seeing mathematical relationships in everyday situations. The story builds number sense through meaningful use, not abstract drilling, and associates maths with adventure rather than anxiety.
How this story works
Early mathematical thinking develops best through meaningful context, not drills. The story embeds number concepts in problems worth solving — so your child uses maths because they want to, not because they're told to.
What your child hears
Your child goes on a quest where numbers solve real problems. How many apples does the dragon need? Which bridge is long enough? The maths isn't a lesson — it's the key to the adventure.
When to use this story
When your child is naturally counting things
When you want to build number sense without formal instruction
Before school entry, to build mathematical confidence
When a child says 'I don't like numbers' or shows early maths anxiety
As a bedtime story that makes maths feel like an adventure
After the story
The story is the beginning. Here's how to keep it going:
“How many [things] were there?”
“What was the pattern?”
“Can you spot patterns around the house?”
Try this
Go on a "number hunt" around the house — count steps, sort objects, find patterns
The research behind this approach(show)
Educational adventures based on research-backed learning theories.
- Dweck, C. S. (2006). Mindset: The New Psychology of Success. Random House.
- Bandura, A. (1977). Self-efficacy: Toward a unifying theory of behavioral change. Psychological Review.
- Durlak, J. A., et al. (2011). The impact of enhancing students' social and emotional learning: A meta-analysis of school-based universal interventions. Child Development, 82(1), 405–432.
- CASEL. (2020). CASEL's SEL Framework.
- Bybee, R. W. (2006). The 5E Instructional Model. NSTA.