Sunday, September 01, 2019

Hundred Numbers Chart

A 10x10 grid of numbers written from left to right, top to bottom, starting in the upper-right corner with 1 and ending with 100, is called a "Hundred Numbers Chart." 

It's a highly effective tool to teach eager youngsters how to add and subtract two digit numbers, instinctively, using the chart as an aid. Eventually, the chart becomes internalized, and students can do the calculations rapidly and accurately entirely in their heads.

To begin using the chart:

First, make sure the child can already count by 10s. Then have the child learn from experience that the numbers in the chart simply represent counting, and that counting forward 10 squares can be done more easily by starting on any square and moving straight down to the square immediately below.

To demonstrate 23 + 35 = 58:

Start with your finger on 23. Move straight down three rows (each move represents adding 10, so three such moves represents adding 30). Now, count right five spaces. The answer, clearly, is 58. A similar process can be employed to carry out subtraction. Borrowing and carrying is handled by wrapping around the ends of rows as one executes the process.

Parents should give this a try themselves, first, and become masters at utilizing the tool before attempting to use it to instruct their children. After a very short while, using the chart becomes second nature for adults.

Children will take more time to achieve the same level of skill, of course. But with patience, practice, and plenty of good energy, encouragement, and hand clapping, they'll soon be performing difficult mental calculation with ease and accuracy.

A Hundred Numbers Chart is also useful in teaching young kids to count by twos, fives, tens, threes, and fours (a precursor to learning multiplication). 

For example, to learn to count by threes:

Have your student start on three, circle that number, then count spaces three at a time, circling the number in colorful crayon each time they land on a new square, and saying each new number out loud. Verbalization is critical as an aid to memory. The colored numbers will form a clear geometric pattern that will eventually make memorizing the sequence easier. After a while, counting by twos, three's fours, etc. will become second nature.

Learning to count by threes, for instance, is a great way to introduce multiplication. One 3 is 3; 2 threes are 6; 3 threes are 9, etc. Again, doing this activity out loud and with colored crayon is super important. Before you know it, your child will have mastered the threes.

Click here to download a Hundred Numbers Chart to print and use at home.

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