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The Purpose of Manipulatives for Learning Maths

“Manipulatives can be important tools in helping students to think and reason in more meaningful ways. By giving students concrete ways to compare and operate on quantities, such manipulatives as pattern blocks, tiles, and cubes can contribute to the development of well-grounded, interconnected understandings of mathematical ideas.”

Stein and Bovalino (2001)

The use of manipulatives has often been recommended in the teaching of subjects like Mathematics because they enhance and deepen your child’s understanding. It has been said that a picture is worth a thousand words. In the teaching of abstract concepts, manipulatives provide your child that picture. Manipulatives allow your child to move from concrete experiences to abstract reasoning.

For example, children learning about fractions may find it difficult to grasp that 1/2 is larger than 1/8 because, in their understanding of numerical values, 2 is smaller than 8. By observing a physical representation of 1/2 compared to 1/8, they can visualise why 1/2 is larger than 1/8.

Image Source: Year 6 Math – Fractions, Decimals, Percentage

The Benefits of Using Maths Manipulatives

Studies demonstrate that children using manipulatives make gains in the following areas (Heddens; Picciotto, 1998; Sebesta and Martin, 2004):

Children using manipulatives in specific mathematical subjects are also more likely to achieve success than those who do not:

Source: Research on the Benefits of Manipulatives

The use of manipulatives deepens the understanding of concepts and relationships, makes skills practice meaningful, and leads to retention and application of the information in new problem-solving situations.

Resources: Math Manipulatives from ETA Hand2Mind

Manipulatives in Action

Here’s an example of manipulatives being used to help children understand the mathematical concept:

Image Source: Teacher


3 Stages of Learning

Jerome Bruner identified three stages of cognitive representation:

  1. Enactive, which is the representation of knowledge through actions.
  2. Iconic, which is the visual summarization of images.
  3. Symbolic representation, which is the use of words and other symbols to describe experiences.

Children need to go through each stage before they can move on to the next. In Math, this is referred to as the concrete-representational-abstract sequence of instruction:

The use of manipulatives supports the learning of math in the concrete stage. Some examples of mathematical manipulatives that help in this stage include:

When the concept has been mastered at the concrete stage, your child is ready to move on to the representational stage. This stage involves the use of image representations, such as:

When the concept has been mastered at the representational stage, your child is ready to move on to the abstract stage.

This final stage involves the use of abstract representations with numbers and symbols, for example:

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