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Printable
Color the Numberblocks and Catch the Intruder!

The robot guards have found the friends in the Museum of Numbers! Use the number key to color the Numberblocks and the robot guards. Color the displays in any colors you like! Ask your grown-up to help cut out a tickle stick and glue it to cardboard. Tickle, tickle!

Printable
Practice Odds, Evens, Pairs, Counting Down, and More With the Numberblocks

Use this page to show what you know. Who lives where? Remember Odd Street and Even Street? Who lives on each? Draw lines to show who lives where. Count down from 10 to one for blast off. Press the buttons as you count down. Circle all the green aliens. How many are there?

Printable
Color the Giant Numberblocks From Ten to Fifty!

Add some big colors to these big Numberblocks. How many tens make twenty? Can you count by tens to fifty? How about backwards? Ten and another Ten is Twenty, and another Ten is Thirty. Fifty, Forty, Thirty, Twenty, Ten... Time for some Number Fun! You can count on us, we're the Numberblocks!

Printable
Blast Off to Number Planet With This Numberblocks Game!

Roll the die to color this space scene! Here's how to play:
1. Find a friend and a die to roll. Choose who will be player 1 and who will be player 2.
2. Take turns throwing the die. Color the parts of the picture that contain the number you roll. If they’re already colored in, miss a turn.
3. The first player to color their picture is the winner!
 

News Clip
Struggling With Math? Just Add Color!

One artist correlates the ten colors to a base ten counting system and uses color to teach young children about numbers. With each color representing a number, students are able to create visual pictures of math equations and use imagery to remember important number facts. This video is excerpted from BBC News.

Printable
Get Some Fun Money Practice in With This Bluey Shopkeeper Game

Right, chooks, let’s play shops! First customer to the finish with all their bits & bobs, wins. Here's how to play:

1. With a friend (or two), decide who will be the shopkeeper and customers.
2. Ask a grown-up to snip everything out. The bits and bobs go to the shopkeeper, then share the dollarbucks between the customers.
3. Customers take turns to roll a die and move around the board. If you land on something you like, buy it... but if you don’t have enough money, you gotta put something back!

Printable
Can You Break the Code for Bluey?

Psst, over here! Sparkle-Shot (that’s Bingo) has found these secret notes from Mum and Dad. What do they say? Look at the code from Mum and write out what she's saying! And what about a long message from Dad? Plus, help Drill Sergeant Rusty reach Private Jack using their mission code.

For extra fun, why not make up your own mission code and test it out with a friend? It could be in your bedroom or school playground or park. You could even swap secret messages using Mum and Dad’s alphabet code! 

Printable
What's on the Shopping List? Play This Bluey Memory Game

Crumbled steak! Mum's left the shopping list at home! Have a long look at her list, then fold it back and see how much you remember:

  • What color balloon did Mum want? Red or green
  • How many avocados did Mum need? 6 or 2
  • Do you remember what sport equipment? Cricket bat or hockey stick.

Turn the shopping list back over and count up how many you got right. How did you do?

Printable
Try This Bluey "Busy Beach" Seek and Find Worksheet

Mum and Dad packed everything except the kitchen sink for a day. Can you find all the things in this fun beach scene with the Heeler family? Look closely, and you should find 10 seagulls, 10 sandcastles, 10 beach Santa snowglobes, and so much more?

Video
The Magic of Math on the Soccer Field

In The Magic of Math on the Soccer Field, host Marcus du Sautoy tries to convince one math reject that math is present everywhere in the soccer game he loves — from quadratic equations on the pitch to the probability of a team winning. Du Sautoy makes the case that the soccer players are intuitive mathematical geniuses. This video is excerpted from BBC’s Horizon: Why Maths Doesn’t Add Up, where Marcus du Sautoy introduces the elegance and wonder of math to a “math reject,” traveling from the classroom to a four-dimensional world.