How do children learn to count? Part 1

How do children learn to count? You could imagine that numbers are words, and children learn them like any other word. (Actually, this wouldn’t help much, since we still don’t really understand how children learn words, but it would neatly deflect the question.) However, it turns out that children learn to count in a bizarre fashion quite unlike how they learn about other words.

If you have a baby and a few years to spend, you can try this experiment at home. Every day, show you baby a bowl of marbles and ask her to give you one. Wait until your baby can do this. This actually takes some time, during which you’ll either get nothing or maybe a handful of marbles.

Then, one day, between 24 and 30 months of age, your toddler will hand you a single marble. But ask for 2 marbles or 3 marbles, etc., your toddler will give you a handful. The number of marbles won’t be systematically larger if you ask for 10 than if you ask for 2. This is particularly odd, because because by this age the child typically can recite the count list (“one, two, three, four…”).

Keep trying this, and within 6-9 months, the child will start giving you 2 marbles when asked for, but still give a random handful when asked for 3 or 4 or 5, etc. Wait a bit longer, and the child will manage to give you 1, 2 or 3 when asked, but still fail for numbers greater than 3.

This doesn’t continue forever, though. At around 3 years old, children suddenly are able to succeed when asked for any set of numbers. They can truly count. (This is work done by Karen Wynn some years ago, who is now a professor of psychology at Yale University.)

Of course, this is just a description of what children do. What causes this strange pattern of behavior? We seem to be, as a field, homing in on the answer, and in my next post I’ll describe some new research that sheds light onto the question.


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11 thoughts on “How do children learn to count? Part 1”

  1. Hey, I wouldn’t use marbels with babies or toddlers, I have known even 5 year olds to put marbels in their mouth.

  2. My daughter is 13 months and can count to 5. Of course she probably doesn’t know what the numbers mean but she’s learning quickly. Thanks for the ideas on how to bring meaning to the “word” numbers. I won’t be using marbles but instead some Cheerios! Very rewarding snacks

  3. Marbles??? What a silly medium to use with babies or any toddler under 3. Who would give marbles to a baby? This must have been written by your typical neuroscientist engrossed in a world of academia and with little real world experience with children. i know one neuroscientist who had no idea whether a 6 month old could walk :)

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