Product Description
【 Color Sorting and Counting】Our sorting toys make counting and color sorting practice a real pleasure! Kids simply hold the tweezers like a pencil, then grab the balls and place them in the tube by color. Kids can master early math, color recognition, matching, counting, and sorting, develop fine motor skills, and more in this fun way!
【 Toddler Learning Activities】Toddlers learn numbers and early color matching every time they mix and match beads. This toddler learning toy is colorful easily attracts children’s attention and stimulates the development of their visual perception skills. It also helps children develop fine motor skills and hand-eye coordination and builds basic early math skills.
【 Develop Multiple Skills】The sorting set can help children master early math skills such as counting, grouping, comparisons, addition, subtraction, and more. Using double-sided activity cards, kids can do simple color matching, numbers, sensory play, develop fine motor skills, and more.
【 Value Pack Set】For any homeschool or classroom, this toy makes a great addition to math manipulation teaching. The sorting set comes in a value pack with 50 beads, 5 sorting cups, 5 test tubes, 1 pencil grip tool, 1 test tube base, plus 1 spoon and 20 challenge flash cards.
【 This Makes for an Excellent Toy】It’s educational, social, and perfect for group play, ensuring fun for everyone. The toy is designed to inspire and stimulate children’s thinking which is suitable for kids, toddlers, and preschoolers aged 3, 4, 5, and 6 years old. Whether for Christmas, birthdays, or any day, it makes a fantastic toy.
Jess –
Easy to use
Great for fine motor skills
V.E.M. –
Great learning tool
Bought this for my preschool aged child to learn and have fun with. They absolutely love this. I even use it to help my kindergarten age child with learning math
David68 –
FunCational
I work with young children (ages 2.6 years â 3.5 years old) who have special needs, including limited color recognition, difficulty classifying and counting objects, and significant fine motor delays. Finding engaging and effective learning tools for these students can be challenging.That’s why I was so impressed with this Counting and Color Sorting Toy. It’s a set of math manipulatives designed specifically for the needs of early learners.The set includes: a compartmentalized tray, five colored marbles, five color-coded matching bowls, five plastic tubes ,a dipping spoon, and a pair of pincer tweezers. All the pieces are well-made and durable. The laminated cards are double-sided: one side with numbers (0-9) and the other with corresponding colored objects matching the marbles. There’s also a set of cards with mathematical symbols (+, =, >, <), but I haven't introduced those yet. My students are too young.The beauty of this set is its versatility. I can use it to teach color recognition, sorting, counting, and basic number representation. The cards with pictures provide a concrete link between the written number and the actual quantity of objects.My students are learning through play. While the pincer tweezers are a bit too advanced for my students right now, they're still having a great time using the dipping spoon to sort the marbles. They're actively engaged and developing a foundational understanding of early math concepts through play.I highly recommend this Counting and Color Sorting Kit for parents, teachers, or anyone working with children between 3-6 years old. This set of manipulatives is fun, engaging, educational and I have observed how my two and three year old students can sit at the table for long durations giggling learning and having a FunCational time!
C. L. Ortiz –
Fun for more than just toddlers
My daughter is 9, but still enjoyed using this set to work on patterning, as well as to work with addition and place values. The only thing she did not like was the 3 pronged tweezers, which didn’t last more than a few minutes before she rejected them. I can’t blame her. I’m 43 and have a long established pincer grasp, and I couldn’t really get them to work either. Aside from that, it’s a worthwhile set, and takes some of the tedium out of arithmetic practice.
savannalilly –
Great for fine motor skills
My 2 year old niece was born with webbed fingers, and recently had them separated. We were looking for things to help build her fine motor skills. This activity is similar to something my husband has at his school, where he works with students with disabilities. He recommended we get this for her because his students love it, and it really helps with building their skills. She seems to love it, and it really makes her work hard at using her little fingers to manipulate the little pieces. We are happy with the skills it’s developing for her and she’s having fun playing with it. Right now she has to be supervised the whole time because of her age and the little pieces, but it’s working out great!
Slvrscoobie –
Lots of small pieces that were lost quickly
Great tool for counting and fine motor skills but the pieces quickly ended up all over the place and lost completely. It comes with tray, bowls, plastic tubes, marbles and a variety of cards for your child to practice with. My son was to young to really get the cards idea but he had fun trying to pick up and sort out the marbles along with working on counting. I would recommend this set however keep it in a more controlled setting and supervise so the pieces do not get lost.
Glendale Gyro –
Counting on it
This is great for first and second graders practicing addition. It must be used responsibly though because it is not overly sturdy and has small parts that could be dangerous if swallowed.
Dianemcfarlane –
Versatile
This is an excellent fine motor activities. I use this as a part of my therapy sessions with young patients. It helps with improving dexterity and coordination skills not to mention itâs fun for them.The colors are vibrant and the cards that come with them are helpful for use for cognition. There are several different options for use.Overall I am happy with this product.