I Can Count

Slide the beads, learn to count!

Part of I Can Learn

Illustrated by Thomas Elliott
Look inside
Board Book
$12.99 US
7.38"W x 8.2"H x 0.67"D  
On sale Jan 03, 2023 | 12 Pages | 9781680106862
Up to Kindergarten
Reading Level: Lexile AD350L
Using the colorful, tactile abacus children will learn how to count to ten in no time with this interactive board book from the I Can Learn! collection.

With a colorful ten-piece bead abacus to encourage a hands-on approach to counting, children will learn to count from 1 to 10 in no time at all!

Learning is fun with the I Can Learn! collection, where young readers can explore colors, shapes, counting, and many other first concepts in these hands-on books. Manipulating special features such as tactile elements, sound buttons, and flaps is an excellent way for children to reinforce learning and strengthen hand-eye coordination.
Lauren Crisp is a children's book editor who is lucky enough to make beautiful books every day! She lives in London but grew up in Yorkshire, and loves long walks out in the country with her dog, Ludo. She enjoys reading, writing, and dreaming up fun rhymes for the books she works on!

Thomas Elliott is an illustrator and designer with a great love of nature. When he's not creating beautiful books, he likes to spend time with his family and two dogs.
A board book with a built-in abacus to help little ones learn to count from one to 10.

Each page uses a rhyming couplet to introduce a visual puzzle that requires tots to count items to figure out the answer: “Dogs have tails that wag a lot. / How many brown dogs can you spot?” “See the airplanes in the sky! / Count them as they fly so high.” The puzzles are easy and aren’t out to trick readers—in the first set, there’s only one dog on the page, and in the second, there are only two airplanes and no other flying craft. Ten colorful wooden beads run along a rainbow-shaped arch that floats above the page, and readers are periodically reminded to “slide the beads to help you count!” It’s an amusing and attractive feature, but the arch is not very long, which means the beads slide back easily. When the book is held up, only six of the 10 beads will stay on one side; the other four continually slip back to their home position. It’s an unfortunate design flaw, although the book works properly when laid flat on a table or the floor. That issue aside, the book’s illustrations are appealing and work well with the text.

Will give future readers a helping hand with their numbers, though the tactile element is a bit lacking. (Board book. 1-3) --Kirkus Reviews


PreS-Gr 1–An arch of real beads lives above the story in this board book, so that children can see the numbers on both sides of the equation and count it out! It’s a mini abacus, and every page poses a question: “Dogs have tails that wag a lot. How many brown dogs can you spot?” There is only one dog on that page, but the author has just gotten started. There are two airplanes, then three lights (and three cars obeying the traffic lights), and so on. And thanks to that die-cut arch, the abacus is always handy. VERDICT For preschoolers and up who don’t want to use their fingers to count, this book is the perfect next step. --School Library Journal
additional book photo
additional book photo

About

Using the colorful, tactile abacus children will learn how to count to ten in no time with this interactive board book from the I Can Learn! collection.

With a colorful ten-piece bead abacus to encourage a hands-on approach to counting, children will learn to count from 1 to 10 in no time at all!

Learning is fun with the I Can Learn! collection, where young readers can explore colors, shapes, counting, and many other first concepts in these hands-on books. Manipulating special features such as tactile elements, sound buttons, and flaps is an excellent way for children to reinforce learning and strengthen hand-eye coordination.

Author

Lauren Crisp is a children's book editor who is lucky enough to make beautiful books every day! She lives in London but grew up in Yorkshire, and loves long walks out in the country with her dog, Ludo. She enjoys reading, writing, and dreaming up fun rhymes for the books she works on!

Thomas Elliott is an illustrator and designer with a great love of nature. When he's not creating beautiful books, he likes to spend time with his family and two dogs.

Praise

A board book with a built-in abacus to help little ones learn to count from one to 10.

Each page uses a rhyming couplet to introduce a visual puzzle that requires tots to count items to figure out the answer: “Dogs have tails that wag a lot. / How many brown dogs can you spot?” “See the airplanes in the sky! / Count them as they fly so high.” The puzzles are easy and aren’t out to trick readers—in the first set, there’s only one dog on the page, and in the second, there are only two airplanes and no other flying craft. Ten colorful wooden beads run along a rainbow-shaped arch that floats above the page, and readers are periodically reminded to “slide the beads to help you count!” It’s an amusing and attractive feature, but the arch is not very long, which means the beads slide back easily. When the book is held up, only six of the 10 beads will stay on one side; the other four continually slip back to their home position. It’s an unfortunate design flaw, although the book works properly when laid flat on a table or the floor. That issue aside, the book’s illustrations are appealing and work well with the text.

Will give future readers a helping hand with their numbers, though the tactile element is a bit lacking. (Board book. 1-3) --Kirkus Reviews


PreS-Gr 1–An arch of real beads lives above the story in this board book, so that children can see the numbers on both sides of the equation and count it out! It’s a mini abacus, and every page poses a question: “Dogs have tails that wag a lot. How many brown dogs can you spot?” There is only one dog on that page, but the author has just gotten started. There are two airplanes, then three lights (and three cars obeying the traffic lights), and so on. And thanks to that die-cut arch, the abacus is always handy. VERDICT For preschoolers and up who don’t want to use their fingers to count, this book is the perfect next step. --School Library Journal

Photos

additional book photo
additional book photo

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