My feed
Premium

Please
or
to access all these features

Join our Primary Education forum to discuss starting school and helping your child get the most out of it.

Primary education

Number bonds to 20

5 replies

GC79 · 16/04/2016 07:29

My ds was given a learning objective to learn his number bonds to 20. We've been doing this and he's been doing well. My other child asked why they are important and I wasn't sure. Can anyone tell me please?

OP posts:
Report
chelle792 · 16/04/2016 07:30

I think the plan is that he will one day apply them to mental maths for his addition. Eg 13 +27

But my mental maths is rubbish

Report
CodyKing · 16/04/2016 07:32

It's one thing you use all the time

We work I units of 10 - so numbers bond together to make 10

Add 37 and 5 - most would think Oh add three to the 7 to make a whole 10 and then add 2 -

Knowing bonds help with much bigger numbers - 120 plus 85 for example 8plus 2 takes it to 200

Report
CrotchetQuaverMinim · 16/04/2016 07:42

if he knows number bonds to 10 (8+2, 7+3, etc), then make sure he is noticing that they are used to help with learning the bonds to 20 (18+2, 17+3, etc is really one ten, plus the same number bond in the units) rather than just thinking of them as another lot of facts to memorise. (Some children don't automatically notice the pattern of the teen numbers, partly because they sound different when you say them, and haven't really got a good grasp of the tens and units system yet). If he can use the tens bonds to help with bonds to 20, then he will start to realise the usefulness (because it can be applied, for example, to bonds to 30: 28+2, 27+3, in the same way; and then later, in group of 10, so 70+30, 80+20, and then on to more complicated questions, as described above). They are also useful for subtraction (e.g., knowing 7 and 3 make 10 leads to understanding that if you take 7 away from the 10, you're left with the 3, and vice versa. Then you can apply it to 20 take away 7). Physical apparatus such as cuisinaire rods, lego pieces, abacus, numicon, Smarties, mix of 10p and 1p coins, etc is really good for seeing it visually.

Report
poppyfieldmum · 16/04/2016 13:44

Hi GC79. I was doing the same with mine and found this free number bonds quiz very helpful: komodomath.com/kickstart The have bonds to 10, bonds to 20 and multiplication / tables

Report
Kiducation · 12/05/2016 17:14

This reply has been deleted

Message deleted by MNHQ. Here's a link to our Talk Guidelines.

Please create an account

To comment on this thread you need to create a Mumsnet account.