teaching counting money worksheets

by admin on February 12, 2009

I need activities that can help teach money skills for the blind, multiply disabled students.?

They are older, 17-22, and are learning to count coins of $ 1.00. All activities that are commercially available sheets of use (they can not see) or the use of Braille (which can not read.) Other than just giving them coins to count over and over (SO boring) - Does anyone have any suggestions for clean activities that could be used to break monotony? We used to count the change in 5 years, 10s, and they will still take a couple of months to "get it" and I will not be as boring. Ideas?

try to use the term "incidental teaching" - tt childrne works best with special needs. Basically, incidental teaching means learning in the environment that are natural. For example, if the skills of teaching ur money, u can pretend to start a workshop / bring the dining hall and a budget (eg $ 0.50), making the experience of making a purchase. in general, incidental education helps these students to transfer their learning to the environment of real life that help them to better integrate the function.

Mark Wilson Money Trick - Free Magic Lesson - Roll the Bills

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