Purpose:
You can help your child to practice the teen facts, for example 10 + 4 = 14.
What you need:
- Game cards (PDF,56KB) . You can print these or make your own.
- Cardboard
What to do:
Glue the cards on to cardboard.
Shuffle and deal the cards.
Players check to see if they have any pairs. For example 10 + 5 and 15 is a pair.
Players take turns to ask each other for a card to complete a pair. The winner is the first player to place all their cards in pairs. "Do you have 10 + 3?" or "Do you have 13?"
What to expect your child to do:
To correctly make the teen facts.
Variation:
- Use the 10 + cards as flash cards and ask your child to quickly give the answer.
- Do this activity in your home language.
He Kupu Māori:
tāpiri (hia)
|
add
|
tāpiritanga
|
addition
|
otinga
|
result/answer
|
takirua
|
pair
|
riwhiriwhi (~a)
|
shuffle
|
toha (~ina)
|
deal, distribute
|
He Whakawhitinga Kōrero:
- Riwhiriwhia ngā kāri, kātahi ka tohaina katoatia ki ngā kaitākaro. (Shuffle the cards and then deal them out to us all.)
- Mēnā kei a koe tētahi tāpiritanga me tōna otinga, whakatakotoria ēnā kāri ki mua i a koe. (If you have an addition card and its answer, put those cards in front of you.)
- Kei a koe e kare. Tono mai ki ahau kia hoatu tētahi kāri e hiahia ana koe hei hanga takirua. (Its your turn dear. Ask me to give you a card that you want to make a pair.)
- Kua oti katoa ō kāri te whakatakoto ki te tēpu. Ko koe te toa e hoa. (You’ve put down all your cards, You are the winner.)
Download a file of this activity:
PDF (260KB)