How the Calendar Counts Days
Imagine you have a big basket with 7 special stones, each one representing a day of the week. Every time you take a stone from the basket, you say its name: Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday… until Sunday. Then you put all the stones back, and that’s how weeks work!
Now imagine you have another bag with 30 or 31 marbles, each one for the days in a month. Some months are longer than others, just like some of your backpacks feel heavier when you pack more toys.
How Years Come and Go
A year is like having 52 full baskets of stones (which makes 52 weeks) plus a few extra marbles, about 365 of them. That’s how we get all the days in one year. Sometimes, there's an extra day, which is called leap day, and that happens every four years because the Earth takes just a little bit longer than 365 days to go around the Sun.
That’s it, a calendar is just a fun way to count time like you count your toys or your steps!
Examples
- A student is introduced to different calendars used by various cultures around the world.
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See also
- What are calendar systems?
- How Does History of the Roman Calendar Work?
- How Does Constructing Lunisolar Calendars Work?
- How Does A World of Time: Countries That Use A Different Calendar Work?
- How Does The Structure of the 13 Moon Calendar Work?