The NextGen Learning Realm · Curious Countables™

Curious Countables™

Where numbers begin to make sense.

A story-driven math collection that helps children meet numbers the way they meet friends ~ through character, pattern, and playful context. Zero shows up as a wonder. Uno introduces himself. Deux brings the double trouble. Math stops feeling abstract and starts feeling like something children can count on.

More Than A Story

More Than Counting

This collection helps children understand numbers as meaningful and connected, not isolated facts to memorize. Patterns, quantities, and relationships begin to feel familiar ~ giving children a stronger sense of how numbers move through everyday life.

As children connect with the characters, they begin to recognize those same patterns in their own experiences ~ giving them a way to pause, reflect, and respond with clarity.

✨ Did You Know?

Breakfast eaters score about 22% higher on attention and memory tasks. The morning before story-time matters as much as the story itself.

What This Collection Does

Math anxiety starts earlier than most people realize. Many children are rushed through counting drills before they have any context for what a number actually is. Curious Countables was built for a slower, warmer beginning ~ one where numbers arrive as characters and patterns arrive as play. Understanding grows from curiosity, not correction.

Children begin to see that numbers are everywhere ~ in the steps they climb, the apples they split, the heartbeats they can feel. Counting becomes recognition, not recitation.

Parents and educators gain a way to fold math into everyday moments. No worksheets required. Numbers become bedtime-story material, not flashcard fodder.

Families and classrooms build number sense that sticks ~ where patterns, groupings, and quantities feel like discoveries children made themselves, not rules someone handed them.

✨ Did You Know?

Counting playfully before kindergarten predicts algebra success better than IQ does. The runway is built before school even starts.

WHY THIS MATTERS

Why Math Confidence Forms Before Math Lessons

Math anxiety is the only academic anxiety known to begin before formal instruction. Children who absorb the message “I am bad at math” from an adult by age 5 score 17 points lower on math tests by 3rd grade. The wound forms in the home, long before it shows up on a report card.

Stanford’s Math Education Lab found that 80% of math success comes from one thing: number sense built before age 6 through play, story, and friendly exposure. Drills come later. Friendship comes first.

Counting playfully before kindergarten predicts algebra success in 8th grade better than IQ does. The runway is built in early childhood, in story, in the kitchen, on the page. Numbers that smile back at a child become numbers that child trusts for life.

MATH ANXIETY IS CONTAGIOUS

When Parents Say "I'm Bad At Math," Their Kids Score 17 Points Lower By 1st Grade.

In a now-landmark 2015 University of Chicago study, Dr. Sian Beilock and Dr. Susan Levine followed 438 first and second graders. They measured the children’s math performance, then surveyed the parents about how often they helped with math homework AND how anxious they felt about math themselves.

17pts
LOWER MATH SCORES IN KIDS WITH MATH-ANXIOUS PARENTS
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EFFECT IF ANXIOUS PARENTS DID NOT HELP WITH HOMEWORK

The math anxiety only transferred to the child when the parent helped with homework. The transmission was not genetic. It was linguistic. Every time a parent said “I was never good at math,” the child absorbed it. Every time a parent radiated stress over a worksheet, the child learned that math is dangerous territory.

“Math anxiety transmits across generations through the language adults use.”

Beilock & Levine · University of Chicago

BREAKING THE CONTAGION

How Adults Can Stop Passing Math Fear To The Next Generation

The good news in this study is the same as its bad news: math anxiety is taught. Which means it can be untaught. Here is how each adult role can interrupt the cycle.

🏠

For Parents

You do not have to love math. You just have to stop apologizing for it.

  • Strike “I’m bad at math” from your vocabulary. Forever. Even as a joke.
  • Replace it with “Let’s figure this out together.” Curiosity is contagious too.
  • Do “math out loud” in everyday life: counting stairs, splitting cookies, estimating grocery costs. Make numbers visible and friendly.
  • Read counting and number-pattern books from before age 2. Numbers in story are numbers without dread.
  • If you DO feel anxious helping with homework, hand it off without shame. “Let’s ask Dad” beats radiating panic.
👩‍🏫

For Math Teachers

You may be the first ~ or last ~ teacher who could love math back into a child.

  • Catch “I’m bad at math” the moment a student says it. Replace with “You haven’t learned this YET.”
  • Give partial credit for showing thinking, not just for correct answers. Process visibility matters more than speed.
  • Eliminate timed tests for fact fluency before grade 3. Time pressure manufactures math anxiety.
  • Tell stories WITH the math. “There was a baker who needed exactly 7 eggs…” engages 4 brain regions vs 1 for raw drills.
  • Surface women, immigrants, and historical mathematicians who looked nothing like the textbook picture. Representation rewires identity.
📚

For Tutors & Aides

You see the child one-on-one. That intimacy can heal or harm.

  • Begin every session by asking what the child notices, not what they know. Curiosity over performance.
  • Celebrate the WRONG answer when the reasoning is good. “You used the right strategy” lands deeper than “you got it right.”
  • Slow down. Math anxiety often masquerades as “not getting it.” A child given more time stops looking anxious.
  • Use stories, manipulatives, and movement. The child who hates worksheets often loves the same math hidden in a story.
  • Coach parents on language: send home a one-line reminder of what NOT to say.
🧠

For Therapists & Counselors

Math anxiety is anxiety. It deserves clinical respect.

  • Screen for math anxiety in students presenting with school avoidance, perfectionism, or test panic.
  • Treat it like other phobias: gradual exposure, paired with a regulating adult.
  • Differentiate dyscalculia (a learning difference) from math anxiety (a fear response). They look similar; they need different supports.
  • Coach parents on the contagion finding. Most parents have no idea their language is teaching the fear.
  • Use number-themed stories in therapy ~ they desensitize without ever feeling like math homework.
WHERE CURIOUS COUNTABLES COMES IN

Numbers That Smile Back.

Every Curious Countables story is built on the opposite of what creates math anxiety. There is no time pressure. There is no single right answer. There is no shame for not knowing.

The numbers in these stories are characters with personalities. They show up at bedtime, not at the kitchen table during homework crisis. They become friends a child trusts ~ before the child has to perform for them.

You cannot drill love of numbers into a child. But you can read it in.

Did You Know?

How It Comes To Life

• Early number sense ~ a child’s intuitive understanding of quantity and relationships ~ is one of the strongest predictors of later academic success, outperforming early letter knowledge in some longitudinal studies.

•Children learn numbers faster and retain them longer when the quantities are embedded in story and context, rather than memorized as isolated facts.

•Counting aloud ~ even before a child understands what each number means ~ builds the neural pathways that make later mathematical reasoning possible.

Inside The Stories

Inside the World of Numbers

Each story brings a number, a count, or a pattern to life through characters, movement, and meaningful scenes. Children see what Zero’s Wonderfully Nothing Day looks like, how Uno stands One and Only, what Deux does with Two Times the Fun, and why Diez’s Ten Terrific Tricks matter. Numbers take on voices, names, and personalities.

Over time, numbers become things children notice out in the world ~ not symbols on a worksheet, but patterns waiting to be recognized.

✨ Did You Know?

By age 5, the brain has decided whether numbers feel safe or scary. Friendly numbers in safe stories rewrite that verdict.

Three Groups, Twenty-Five Numbers

EACH GROUP OPENS A NEW DOORWAY INTO NUMBER SENSE

Series One

Foundational Numbers

Meet Zero Through Ten

Zero, Uno, Deux, Tres, Cuatro, Cinco, Seis, Siete, Ocho, Nueve, and Diez. The building blocks every other number stands on ~ each one arriving as a character children can see, count alongside, and carry with them.

Series Two

The Teens

Stretch Into Bigger Numbers

Eleven’s Everything Extravaganza, Twelve’s Dozen of Delight, and the whole teen crew all the way through Nineteen. Children discover what happens when numbers start carrying more than one digit ~ and the world gets wider for it.

Series Three

The Twenties & Review

Count With Confidence

Twenty Twinkles, Twenty-One Wonders, and the rest of the twenties ~ plus two review books (The Countable Gathering) that bring every number home together.

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Zero's Wonderfully Nothing Day

0 · Coming Soon

Zero’s wonderfully nothing day proves that nothing is actually something worth noticing. Children meet the quiet power of zero ~ the number that makes every other number matter.

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One and Only Uno

1 · Coming Soon

Uno stands alone, and that’s exactly his magic. Children meet the loneliness, bravery, and first-ness of one ~ the number every story starts with.

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Two Times the Fun with Deux

2 · Coming Soon

Deux shows that everything is more fun in pairs ~ eyes, ears, shoes, friendships. Children learn that two is the number of connection.

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Three Cheers for Tres

3 · Coming Soon

Tres brings three cheers, three wishes, and three-part harmony. Children discover why three feels so satisfying to the ear, the eye, and the heart.

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Fantastic Four with Cuatro

4 · Coming Soon

Cuatro is fantastic, fourfold, and full of corners. Children meet the stability of four through windows, wheels, and the legs of every chair they sit in.

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Five High Fives for Cinco

5 · Coming Soon

Cinco is the high-five of numbers ~ the first number that fills up a whole hand. Children meet the joyful finality of five.

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Six Silly Spins with Seis

Six Silly Spins with Seis

Seis spins six silly ways at once. Children meet a number that loves motion, rhyme, and the gentle chaos of a little more than five.

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Seven Surprises with Siete

7 · Coming Soon

Siete surprises children with the lucky, rainbow, seven-days-a-week magic of the number seven ~ and shows why it shows up everywhere in stories.

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Eight Adventures with Ocho

8 · Coming Soon

Ocho’s eight adventures prove that eight is an acrobat ~ twirling, doubling, balancing. Children meet the infinity that hides inside the number.

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Nine New Notions with Nueve

9 · Coming Soon

Nueve’s nine new notions hop from idea to idea like a number that cannot wait to round up to ten. Children meet the almost-there anticipation of nine.

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Ten Terrific Tricks from Diez

10 · Coming Soon

Diez’s ten terrific tricks bring the foundational count to a grand finale. Children learn why ten is the number everything else counts toward.

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Curious Review Adventure

Bonus A · Coming Soon (0-10 Review)

The whole 0-10 cast gathers for a review adventure ~ Zero through Diez reunited in one celebratory story that locks in every foundational number.

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Eleven's Everything Extravaganza

11 · Coming Soon

Eleven’s everything extravaganza is a first-look at what happens when numbers grow up and need two digits. Children meet the grown-up side of counting.

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Twelve's Dozen of Delight

12 · Coming Soon

Twelve’s dozen of delight introduces children to eggs, months, and why twelve shows up so often in the grown-up world.

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Thirteen's Quirky Curiosities

13 · Coming Soon

Thirteen’s quirky curiosities explores why thirteen feels a little different ~ a little rebellious, a little lucky, a little its own thing.

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Fourteen Fluffy Flamingos

14 · Coming Soon

Fourteen fluffy flamingos line up for a pink-feathered count-off. Children practice fourteen with every fluffy face that flutters past.

 

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Fifteen Flips with Fifferoo

15 · Coming Soon

Fifferoo flips fifteen ways, and every flip counts. Children meet a number that loves momentum and the number halfway to thirty.

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Sweet Sixteen and the Spiral Songbird

16 · Coming Soon

The spiral songbird sings sweet sixteen into the sky. Children hear what sixteen sounds like when it’s set to music.

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Seventeen Steps with Septima

17 · Coming Soon

Septima takes seventeen steps up seventeen small staircases. Children feel the rhythm of counting in the middle-teens.

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Eighteen Echoes of Octavia

18 · Coming Soon

Octavia’s eight-plus-ten echoes ripple through the story like soft drumbeats. Children meet the grown-up warmth of eighteen.

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Nineteen Tries with Tino

19 · Coming Soon

Tino tries nineteen different ways to get to twenty ~ and children laugh along with every near-miss. A story about patience, precision, and the brink of a new number family.

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Twenty Twinkles with Taro and Tula

20 · Coming Soon

Taro and Tula twinkle twenty shared stars across the sky. Children meet the first big milestone on the other side of the teens.

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Twenty-One Wonders with UnaLuna

21 · Coming Soon

UnaLuna’s twenty-one wonders take children through a whole rosary of small miracles ~ one for every number between zero and twenty-one.

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Twenty-Two Tangles with TuTu and Tiko

22 · Coming Soon

TuTu and Tiko tangle twenty-two silly ways, and children untangle them all. A story about doubles, pairs, and how two twos make twenty-two.

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Twenty-Three Treats with Trilo

23 · Coming Soon

Trilo’s twenty-three treats are handed out one by one across a bakery-sized celebration. Children practice counting into the twenties.

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Twenty-Four Feathers of Faye

24 · Coming Soon

Luma’s twenty-five lights glow through the whole story, one for every moment worth celebrating. A quiet, beautiful finale to the counting cast.

 

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Twenty-Five Lights of Luma

25 · Coming Soon

Luma’s twenty-five lights glow through the whole story, one for every moment worth celebrating. A quiet, beautiful finale to the counting cast.

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The Countable Gathering

Bonus A · Coming Soon (0-25 Review)

The complete 0-25 cast shows up for one grand review gathering. Every Countable children have met takes their bow in a story that proves numbers are, in fact, friends.

Start the Journey

Every story helps your child understand how numbers shape the world around them. Start with Curious Countables and let the discovery begin.

How The Magic Works

The Science Behind the Stories

01

Meet The Number

Each number becomes a character with a name, a face, and a way of showing up. Zero. Uno. Siete. Diez. Veinticinco. These aren’t flashcards or drills ~ they are entry points into real number sense, the kind that lasts.

02

Watch It Count

Stories show the number doing its real work in the world ~ pairing, patterning, arriving exactly when it’s needed, holding its place among the others. Children see the invisible architecture of counting made visible, one character at a time.

03

Recognize Them In The Wild

When numbers show up in real life, children finally have friends for them. They can say “there’s a Siete in that rainbow,” or “those shoes are a Deux,” and suddenly counting becomes noticing ~ and noticing becomes the first quiet muscle of mathematical thinking.

✨ Did You Know?

Hands-on play activates 7 brain regions simultaneously. Worksheets activate 1. The architecture of childhood learning is built to be touched, sung, walked through, and lived.

For The Grown-Ups

Extend The Learning

Additional materials designed to support counting, pattern recognition, and early math understanding.

Every book in the collection comes with companion resources so number sense keeps growing beyond the page.

Printable Activity Packs

Hands-on activities that reinforce learning through drawing, writing, and creative play.— one per book.

Reflection Prompts

Thoughtful prompts that help children connect each story to their own experiences and enviroment.

Parent & Educator Guides

Conversation starters and context for adults to guide children through each story's themes.

Free Companion Worksheets

Character cards, Quotes, & Coloring Sheets that help the lesson land and last. hese are included in the Paid for Activityy Packs.

✨ Did You Know?

Children who play with numbers before kindergarten enter middle school 2 grade levels ahead. We start with story, not flashcards.

What Children Begin To Notice

When Numbers Start to Click

As children engage with the stories, they begin to recognize numbers and patterns in the world around them. Math becomes something they notice, use, and understand rather than something they avoid.

— Suddenly counting steps, splitting cookies, or reading a clock becomes a small adventure instead of a test.

✨ Did You Know?

The corpus callosum, which lets the two halves of the brain talk to each other, develops most rapidly between ages 3 and 6. Bilateral activities ~ rhyme, song, gesture, story ~ literally bridge a child’s brain.

For Parents & Educators

“When a child stops counting on their fingers and starts counting in their heart, something quiet and powerful has happened. Numbers are no longer symbols to fear. They are a language the child already speaks ~ and the world opens because of it.”

~ Maisel McLaula

This collection was built for the adults in a child’s learning life ~ the ones who count goldfish crackers out loud at lunch, who know the difference between a child who’s stuck and a child who’s curious, who want early math to feel like discovery instead of drill. Each story is grounded in developmental-numeracy research, shaped by pattern and play, and told with the warmth of someone who has watched a child’s face change the moment a number finally made sense.

TO THE NUMBER-NORMALIZERS

Thank You For Not Saying "I'm Bad At Math."

Whether you are the parent doing fractions out loud at the dinner table, the teacher who refuses to let a kid leave class believing they are bad at math, the tutor who slowed down until it clicked, or the school counselor who recognized math anxiety as anxiety ~ thank you. You are interrupting one of the most contagious fears in childhood.

Children whose adults model math curiosity instead of math dread enter middle school with measurably higher confidence and grades. The intervention is your language.

You are not just teaching numbers. You are giving a child permission to find them friendly. That permission becomes algebra confidence in 8th grade. Lifetime curiosity in 28.

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