Showing posts with label math. Show all posts
Showing posts with label math. Show all posts

Monday, November 12, 2012

Dayglo counting cards for my severe profound kids...

MsKathyssLogo2.gif picture by mskathy0724
Ms. Kathy's Kids Blog: http://mskathyskids.blogspot.com/

----- Forwarded Message -----
From: Kathy 

 To: Ms. Kathy's KidsFacebook
Sent: Saturday, October 13, 2012 2:48 PM
Subject: [Ms. Kathy's Kids] Dayglo counting cards for my severe profound kids...

Facebook
Dayglo counting cards for my severe profound...
Ms Kathy2:48pm Oct 13
Dayglo counting cards for my severe profound kids with visual impairments. http://www.facebook.com/l/UAQEZcEc4/instagram.com/p/QuYnHQj24U/?fb_action_ids=10151258404418735&fb_action_types=instapp%253Atake&fb_ref=ogexp&fb_source=aggregation&fb_aggregation_id=282366635119873
instagram.com
instagram.com

mskathy0724's photo on Instagram
View Post on Facebook · Edit Email Settings · Reply to this email to add a comment.


Dayglo counting cards for my severe profound kids...

MsKathyssLogo2.gif picture by mskathy0724
Ms. Kathy's Kids Blog: http://mskathyskids.blogspot.com/

----- Forwarded Message -----
From: Kathy 

 To: Ms. Kathy's KidsFacebook
Sent: Saturday, October 13, 2012 2:48 PM
Subject: [Ms. Kathy's Kids] Dayglo counting cards for my severe profound kids...

Facebook
Dayglo counting cards for my severe profound...
Ms Kathy2:48pm Oct 13
Dayglo counting cards for my severe profound kids with visual impairments. http://www.facebook.com/l/UAQEZcEc4/instagram.com/p/QuYnHQj24U/?fb_action_ids=10151258404418735&fb_action_types=instapp%253Atake&fb_ref=ogexp&fb_source=aggregation&fb_aggregation_id=282366635119873
instagram.com
instagram.com

mskathy0724's photo on Instagram
View Post on Facebook · Edit Email Settings · Reply to this email to add a comment.


Tuesday, May 24, 2011

Math Manipulatives

As I'm cleaning and packing for the school year's end, this container of poker chips was returned from one of my students' class. I found these poker chips at a Dollar Tree store some years ago. What an inexpensive way to gets and use math manipulatives!

Now they will probably end up in my car with the stuff I'm taking home for summer school!
If I have posted this idea before, please excuse me as it is the end of the school year and my brain is southern deep fried!

Saturday, April 3, 2010

Counting Bells and Learning to Write

Here's my little toy tester doing audible math with some jingle bells in a basket. The big bucket is underneath to keep the bells from rolling all over the floor. He has cerebral palsy and will drop them. Doesn't stop him from trying to hold all of them even when I tell him I can't even do that.
I will give him an addition problem like "What's four and three more or four plus three?" He picks up four, then three more and drops them back in the basket to check himself by listening to the bells clink as they hit the basket. He's pretty good actually!
In this photo, I have drawn lines on half a fluorescent colored poster board. Then I laminated it. My beginning large print readers can practice forming letters on it with dry erase markers. When I go to a couple of classes I use them to write what the teacher has on the class board for kids who can't see far enough to see the board. The students will copy from this board at their desks rather than from the board on the class wall.
 
One of my teachers uses actually uses permanent ink markers on hers. She found that the kids would rub the dry erase marker off the board with their noses from trying to read it or "accidentally on purpose" with their sleeves or fingers. To clean the boards she uses a spray can of "Goo-Gone" and a paper towel. In this photo I have a ruler on the line to show how far apart the lines are. I used Sharpee (C) fine point colored permanent markers for the lines. I made clouds at the tops of each line for little clouds that I outlined with blue marker. The white of the clouds is correction fluid. (I used this kind because it doesn't flake up and the little brush inside is flexible enough to actually paint it on).

Flower tops were drawn to the center dotted lin. The roots on the flowers show the line where certain letters like the lowercase "j" and "y" have tails that dip down into the ground area. 
  

I have made these in different colors but the kids tell me they like yellow best of all. White gives off too much glare for kids with glare problems like with albinism.

Tuesday, March 17, 2009

Big Money!


I found these giant plastic coins at a dollar store--Dollar Tree, to be exact. As soon as I saw them I scooped them up because I thought of them as a good tool for kids with low vision and regular cognitive abilities for learning coins. I have put coins under the CCTV before, but suppose you're traveling from school to school and you don't have one in your back pocket? besides that these are accessible by touch and just plain fun. I may take close up photos of these--front and back-- to use in an Intellitools activity. The program comes with some photos of coins but they can be enlarged only so much without losing clarity.