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Partner Math Play with Counters: A Hands-On Addition Warm-Up Using the Math Kit

Looking for a low-prep, high-impact math warm-up that gets your students talking, thinking, and collaborating? This activity is simple to set up, fun for students, and packed with opportunities for meaningful math talk.

It also uses just a few materials from your Math Kit—making it easy to weave into your daily math routine.

Watermelon Seeds Addition: A Simple Math Warm-Up for Cooperation + Number Sense

The Why Behind the Warm-Up

In early math, students need repeated, hands-on experiences with composing numbers. Understanding that a number can be made in different ways—by combining two parts—is foundational for addition, part-part-whole thinking, and later, algebraic reasoning.

This warm-up emphasizes:
  • Cooperation between two students
  • Verbalizing strategies (math talk)
  • Flexible thinking about number combinations
Partner Math Play with Counters: A Hands-On Addition Warm-Up Using the Math Kit

What You’ll Need:

  • Any food-themed play mat (we love the watermelon one from the Math Kit!
  • A deck of number cards (or just write numbers on slips of paper)
  • Two different colored counters (e.g., blue and yellow)
Build Early Addition Skills with This Easy 2-Student Math Game Using Play Mats

How to Play:

  • Pair up students.
  • Flip a number card (between 5 and 10 is a great range to start with).
  • Students work together to place that many counters on the play mat
But here’s the twist: Each student can only use one color, and both colors must be used at least once!

The students discuss and agree on how to split the number. For example:
  • If the number is 7, one student might use 3 blue counters and the other might place 4 yellow counters on the mat.
  • Encourage students to explain their reasoning: “We made 7 by combining 3 and 4.”, “I put down 2, and she put down 5. 2 + 5 is 7!”

Bonus: Encourage Math Talk

  • Give students prompts to guide their discussion:
  • “How many do you have?”
  • “What number are we trying to make?”
  • “What’s another way we could do it?”
  • “What does your group look like?”

Keep It Fresh:

  • Try with different number ranges (e.g., 1–5 for younger learners, 10–20 for extension).
  • Switch up play mats—pizza slices, fruit bowls, or ten frames all work beautifully.
  • Challenge students to find all the combinations for a number.

Why It Works

This warm-up builds early addition skills in a way that’s social, visual, and meaningful. When students physically manipulate counters and explain their thinking, they deepen their understanding of how numbers work—and they learn to listen and collaborate too.
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