Teaching Money Once the concept of “symbols” representing something had been learned, this concept could be applied to teaching many things to an autistic child. Teaching money was definitely one of those occasions to show the child how the "parts" made up the whole. It had taken me about $10.00 in change to make the prop I needed to teach money. I hope to make both the "time" and "money" tools I created available as posters for parents to use. The idea behind this was simply to give Zachary an exact visual of how money "fit together" in terms of a "concept"... that 100 pennies = $1.00 , 10 pennies = 1 dime, 2 nickels = 1 dime, 1 nickel = 5 pennies, 2 nickels = 1 dime = 10 pennies = 1 dime = 1 nickel + 5 pennies = 1 dime = 2 nickels... and so on. Note that I did provide some repetition here because I found that as I went through the "board", Zachary had great enthusiasm if he could "answer" something previously learned in terms of "what equaled what" (i.e, 2 nickels = 1 dime) and that helped keep him interested in the task... anticipating knowing yet another answer as we moved along! I find Zachary's interest to be absolutely overwhelming the first time we did the task - as I helped him "decode something", but to go to "almost no interest" by the second try. As such, with almost everything, I always had to "put things away for a while" and take them out again later. At times this was very frustrating, but, I just came to accept this as a fact of life. :o) The board below represents a FINAL view of what I am using to teach Zachary the concept of money. Since interest needed to be maintained, just showing this entire board at once would not be the way I would start at first if I had to do this all over again. I would take "each section" and actually work on that section with "real money" and use the board as another tool to reinforce the concept once I had taught "each part" with actual money. This was one of those issues I was still working and, unfortunately, I can only share my experience to date in terms of how I did things, what worked and what did not work in terms of traps I fell into. In working with Zachary I found that just verbally giving him the equations also worked well. For example, I would say: "10 pennies = 1 dime " and later, I would say: "10 pennies = " and I would wait for him to provide the answer. As with phonics, that seemed to work quite well. The poster provided a good visual "final concept", but, I really think a verbal "calling out" of equations and the use of actual money was the best way to start teaching the concept of money. Of course, since money can be a chocking hazard, when I did use it, I was always careful to make sure I was there with Zachary and that "all the coins were returned" when we were done. Using "exact amounts" at first was critical. I could then "add" more money and show Zachary how money could be "added" or subtracted... just like anything else that had to do with numbers. In my opinion, the "correct progression" was important when it came to teaching money. I first took 10 pennies and showed that 10 pennies = 1 dime, then I took 2 nickels and showed 2 nickels = 1 dime. I started with a definition of each basic unit of money first... 1 penny was shown as 1 penny (as I showed him an actual penny), 1 nickel was shown to be "this silver thing" and also said to "equal 5 pennies"... and so on! I worked with one unit at a time to show the various combinations that could "make that equivalent"... for example working with a dime and showing that 1 dime "was this little silver thing", but 1 dime also was equal to 2 nickels, or 1 nickel and 5 pennies or 10 pennies. I did this for the nickel, the quarter, and the dollar as well... working my way up, from the smallest unit up... starting with the penny, to just show 1 penny... then the nickel... to show 5 pennies = 1 nickel, then the dime... to show 10 pennies = 1 dime or 1 nickel and 5 pennies = 1 dime and so on. I started with pennies, showed how each "related to all other units" (nickel, dime, quarter, dollar - counting out up to 100 pennies to show the dollar relationship, etc.). Then, I tackled the next unit.. and its "combinations". I spent a long time putting together this "final board"- actually using glue to put each coin into its perfect place, etc... but, again I found that Zachary lost interest the second day... so, I suggest to parents that they try just one small unit each day... and work up to the whole as shown below... and to use the "final board" as a summary or reinforcement when the basic units are learned. :o) Autistic children are very intelligent and, at least with Zachary, I found that although he wanted to "take it all in at once", doing that often worked to my disadvantage in that it was then much harder to maintain interest the next day and the tool had to be put away for a while and be retrieved later to continue the lesson. A slow buildup over time, in my opinion, would be more helpful than providing the entire concept "as on this board" all at once... the final board was good, but only once the basics had been learned as small, individual increments. Many things, unfortunately, I had to learn the hard way, but I hope that my experiences with Zachary will help many parents from falling into the same traps I personally encountered. :o)
This same concept of "building up slowly", in my opinion, should be applied to just about any lesson... for example, in teaching geography... teach the parts to the whole... start with ONE country, then ONE continent, etc. and put it all together... like a puzzle! |
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