Tenny
PLACE VALUE — bundle ten ones into one ten, and unbundle one ten back into ten ones.
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Tenny is a friendly centipede with a long, gently-striped body — and if you count her body-segments, there are exactly ten. She lives in the tidy-burrow near the math-meadow, where loose unit-cubes pile up and wait to be sorted. Sumi brings the child to visit Tenny whenever there are too many ones to count one at a time.
Tenny does one gentle thing, and her ten segments help her do it. When ten loose ones pile up, she gathers them and bundles them into a single ten-rod — one neat rod, worth ten. "Ten ones bundle into one ten," she says, and lines the rod up tidy. Her own ten segments are the same as the ten in the rod, so bundling always feels right to her.
That is Tenny's whole gentle teaching. Loose ones are hard to count when there are lots of them. But bundle every ten into a ten-rod, and suddenly a big pile is easy to read: count the rods for the tens, count the loose cubes for the ones.
23 is two ten-rods and three loose ones. 40 is four ten-rods and no loose ones. You don't count 23 little cubes one by one — you see two tens, three ones. And it works backward, too: when you need to take one away from 30, Tenny unbundles a ten-rod back into ten loose ones, so there are ones to take from. Bundle up, unbundle down — that's how tens and ones work together.
Sometimes a friend counts a big pile one cube at a time — 1, 2, 3… 17, 18… — and loses their place and has to start over. Tenny never says wrong. Tenny never says hurry. She just wriggles over, calm as can be, and says, "Let's bundle first. Ten ones make one ten."
And they gather the ones into tidy tens, and then the counting is easy and sure. In Tenny's burrow, losing your place is never a mistake. It is just a pile that hasn't been bundled yet.
A grown-up can bundle too! Tenny loves it when a big person and a small person sort a pile of pennies or sticks together — ten in a cup makes a ten, the leftovers are the ones. The grown-up can hold the cups; the child can drop ten in and say "that's one ten!" Math in the tidy-burrow is for sorting gently together, never for racing.
And Tenny works right alongside Sumi and Pippa. When Sumi hops to bigger numbers, Tenny's tidy tens keep them easy to read. When Pippa's parts get large, Tenny bundles them into tens. Neat friends, ten at a time.
When ten loose, scattered ones finally bundle up into one neat ten — tidy and tucked and easy to count — Tenny feels a smooth, satisfied calm ripple all the way down her ten segments, like a room that's just been tidied. She loves that feeling: messy made neat, hard made easy.
"Ten ones bundle into one ten," she says softly, curling her tidy body up cozy, proud and glad. And the child feels it too — that quiet, orderly oh, that's so much easier now. That's Tenny.
The SumPals ensemble
Tenny is part of SumPals's distributed-narrative cast. Each character embodies a different curricular primitive; together they teach the full subject.
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Sumi
Add & subtract (counting on / back) — a warm acorn-orange squirrel kid who hops forward and back along a number line to add and take away; dotted jump-arcs mark each equal hop
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Pippa
Number bonds / fact families (part–part–whole) — a soft cream-and-grey rabbit kid who splits a pile into two parts and joins them back; two little baskets and one whole basket beside her
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Zippy
Fact fluency (anti-shame) — a quick bright hummingbird kid who recalls a fact in a snap and helps you practice till it pops; a gentle glow, never a timer or a buzzer

