When Your Child Still Counts One by One
Your child still points and counts a single finger at a time whenever you ask how many. With the rule that the thumb is worth five, they learn to read a number in one hand shape, so counting feels far calmer.
Counting on the fingers helps your child work with numbers calmly and stay focused as they go. It is fun, easy to remember, and the tool is always right there with them. Private and online classes are available.

Jarimatika (finger math) is a way of counting that uses all ten fingers to add, subtract, multiply, and divide. Children ages 3 to 10 work out sums on their own hands, grow more comfortable with numbers, and build steady hand coordination. Each finger movement also builds your child's focus and working memory. This method is fun and easy to remember, so your child enjoys practicing every day.
If one of these pictures feels like your child, Lilo's jarimatika can be a fitting place for them to start.
Your child still points and counts a single finger at a time whenever you ask how many. With the rule that the thumb is worth five, they learn to read a number in one hand shape, so counting feels far calmer.
When the count passes ten, your child often stalls. The Big Friend formula teaches them to raise one finger on the tens hand neatly, so moving into the teens feels smooth and easy to remember.
Your child loses interest quickly when asked only to memorize numbers. The playful movement of two hands keeps them happy to practice every day, training focus and working memory without feeling like a chore.
Your child is 4 to 6 years old and will soon meet counting lessons at school. The J0 to J11 ladder builds an early comfort with numbers and patterns, so they step into math class with confidence.
60 minutes/session
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60 minutes/session
Contact us
45-60 minutes/session
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A leveled curriculum. Your child moves up only after mastering each stage, so the foundation stays solid.
Verified tutors ready to teach online, trained in reading, writing, counting, and finger math for young children.
Tekun melatih anak berhitung memakai jari secara runut untuk mengasah fokus lewat langkah kecil yang menyenangkan.
Penuh kesabaran melatih anak berhitung memakai jari secara runut untuk mengasah fokus dalam suasana belajar yang hangat.
Hangat menemani anak berlatih sempoa supaya fokus dan memori kerjanya terlatih lewat permainan dan benda nyata.
Sabar membimbing anak berhitung dengan jari supaya teliti dan fokus lewat permainan dan benda nyata.
Dengan ramah mengajak anak berlatih sempoa untuk mengasah fokus dan daya ingat lewat langkah kecil yang menyenangkan.
Dengan lembut mengajak anak berlatih sempoa untuk mengasah fokus dan daya ingat lewat permainan dan benda nyata.
Jarimatika at Lilo is laid out neatly in 12 stages, from J0 to J11. Your child holds and moves their fingers first, then slowly counts in their head. This step by step path, in line with the Singapore approach, helps your child truly understand what numbers mean.
Your child learns numbers through the shape of the right and left hand while playing. The mood stays relaxed, so your child learns with joy.
Your child begins adding and subtracting from small numbers up to bigger ones. They understand what adding and subtracting really mean, so their counting is strong.
Your child moves up to the hundreds and learns what each digit is worth, so the fingers and the numbers they stand for start to fit together naturally.
Your child lets go of the fingers and pictures the numbers in their head, answering with confidence as their focus and memory grow stronger along the way.
Lilo gives your child a clear set of finger rules, two distinctive number-pairing formulas, and one unique way to multiply with the fingers. Every counting step becomes clear and easy for your child to remember.
When two hands move with steady rules, your child trains focus, working memory, and visualization in one activity they enjoy.
The thumb is worth 5 and each other finger is worth 1, so the right hand forms the numbers 0 to 9. The left hand holds the tens, so your child can read numbers 1 to 99 across two hands.
When the fingers on the right hand fall short, your child opens the thumb and lowers its partner, using pairs that make 5 such as 1 and 4 or 2 and 3. Your child learns to see how numbers relate, and the answer sticks on its own.
When the count passes ten, your child raises one finger on the tens hand and opens the partner that makes 10 on the right hand, such as 3 and 7 or 4 and 6. The move into the tens becomes smooth and tidy.
For numbers 6 to 10, your child opens as many fingers as the number minus five, then reads the tens from the open fingers and the ones from the closed fingers. This distinctive method makes big multiplication feel light and grows your child's visualization.
The J0 to J11 ladder is walked one stage at a time, and your child moves up after the finger movements at the current stage are truly fluent.
A few finger struggles naturally show up early on, and Lilo's J0 to J11 stages help your child move through each one calmly.
Why it happensOne finger for one value is not enough on its own. Your child needs one sure way to move from the ones into the tens, and without it the fingers run out of room the moment the count passes ten.
How Lilo helpsAt stage J5 your child learns the Big Friend formula. They raise one finger on the tens hand and open the partner that makes 10, such as 3 with 7 or 4 with 6, so the move into the tens feels smooth and tidy.
Why it happensYour child still sees each number as a separate pile of ones. Until they recognize number pairs, the fingers have to start over each time and working memory fills up fast.
How Lilo helpsAt stage J3 your child practices the Small Friend formula, using pairs that make 5 such as 1 with 4 or 2 with 3. Your child begins to see how numbers relate, the answer sticks on its own, and the hands move with calm.
Why it happensFinger movements memorized without meaning slip away easily. When your child only copies a hand pattern, they get confused the moment a problem changes a little, because the value of each finger is not yet truly understood.
How Lilo helpsLilo starts from Fixed-Value Finger Formations, the thumb worth 5 and each other finger worth 1. In line with the Singapore way of learning, your child holds the fingers first while grasping their value, so every movement carries a meaning they understand.
Why it happensThe jump from hands to head feels heavy when it is pushed too early. Your child needs time for the mental picture of the hands to grow strong before the fingers are truly let go.
How Lilo helpsAt the mastery stage J11, your child lets go of the fingers slowly and pictures the formation, the abstract step in the Singapore way of learning. Their trained visualization and working memory let them count in the head calmly and accurately.
Recognizing number symbols through the formations of the right and left hand.
Counting addition with the fingers, from small numbers up to multi-step problems.
Practicing subtraction using finger formations.
Regular practice grows your child's focus and helps their counting flow with ease.
See how jarimatika uses the ten fingers that are always there to grow focus and ease with numbers, set beside other counting methods, so you feel sure about the best fit for your child.
| Aspek | Jarimatika (finger math) | Sempoa (abacus) | Plain Memorization |
|---|---|---|---|
| Tool used | Your own fingers | Abacus beads | No tool |
| Easy to carry | Always there, anytime | Needs an abacus | Depends on memory |
| What it trains | Logic and movement | Visualization and mental imagery | Memory recall |
| Good for beginners | Very good for early ages | Needs time to adapt to the tool | Can become tiring |
Satu sesi 60 menit. Bisa les privat di rumah atau online. Paket lebih besar lebih hemat per sesi.
Or pay per session:Rp 63.365online, Rp 76.865private, tutor visits your home.
Lilo's Jarimatika is laid out in 12 neat stages. Your child masters one stage first, so learning feels light and solid.
With the Singapore way of learning, your child grasps what numbers really mean, so what they learn stays with them.
Jarimatika helps your child grow more comfortable with numbers and patterns, an important foundation for counting at school later.
The pace and material follow the ability and rhythm of each child.
Neatly structured practice grows your child's concentration and care.
Your child can learn in person at home or online, with a schedule that follows your family's time.

From meeting the finger formations at stage J0 to the number-pairing techniques that make adding and carrying feel smooth, your child learns to count with two hands while building focus and working memory. Reach the Lilo team on WhatsApp at no cost, and we will help find the right starting stage for your child.
Tutor slots are limited.