Learning how to teach counting objects 1 to 5 is one of the very first big wins in preschool math — and the secret is to make it feel like play, not practice. When little ones touch, count, and giggle their way through real objects, the idea sticks.
Why fun beats flashcards
At this age, kids learn through their hands, ears, and silliness. Counting a row of teddy bears, clapping out numbers, and going on a "toy hunt" turns an abstract skill into a game. Below are four playful, classroom-tested steps — plus two free videos you can press play on right now.
1. Start with the big idea: one number, one object
Counting isn’t just saying "1, 2, 3" — it’s matching one number to one thing (one-to-one correspondence). Say "one," touch one toy. Say "two," touch the next.
2. Learn the order with a song
Sing along to the Counting By Ones Song from Have Fun Teaching. Clap and bounce on each number so 1–2–3–4–5 sticks in a joyful way.
3. Touch one toy for each number
Line up five toys and slide one across as you count it, so nothing gets counted twice. Their voice and their finger move together — one toy at a time.
4. Ask "how many?" — then hunt everywhere
After counting, ask "how many?" The answer is always the last number you said (cardinality). Then hunt for groups of 1 to 5 all day — five crackers, three buttons, two shoes. The Toy Counting 1-5 Worksheet makes counting toys a fun challenge.
Watch: How to Teach Counting Objects 1 to 5
This quick guide walks teachers and parents through all four steps with cheerful, paper-craft visuals.
Now let your child play along
Press play and count toys together — your little one points, counts, claps, and even takes a turn all by themselves.
Keep the fun going
- Toy Counting 1-5 Worksheet
- Counting Worksheets
- Counting Songs
- Preschool Resources
- All Math Resources
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Frequently asked questions
What age should kids count objects to 5?
Most children begin counting small groups of objects between ages 2 and 4. Keep it playful and pressure-free — every child moves at their own pace.
What is one-to-one correspondence?
It’s matching one spoken number to exactly one object — the foundation that makes counting meaningful.
How do I know my child understands counting?
After they count a group, ask "how many?" If they answer with the last number they said, they understand cardinality.
Grab some toys, press play, and happy counting!