Plastic Coins 100 Pennies

£9.9
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Plastic Coins 100 Pennies

Plastic Coins 100 Pennies

RRP: £99
Price: £9.9
£9.9 FREE Shipping

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Description

How many of you ask your students to write about what they want to be when they grow up at some point in the year? Yes, they can write a few sentences about what that person does, but let’s take it a little deeper. Using an interactive notebook activity, your students can explore the things they are good at. What kind of career lends itself to those strengths? What do they want to learn from their career? Are there any values this type of career will instill in them? What are some things they definitely do not want to do? Everything I Am: The Complete Plastic Penny does exactly what it says on the tin, assembling everything the band recorded during their brief lifespan under one roof: mono and stereo versions of debut album “Two Sides Of A Penny”, the stereo-only follow-up “Currency”, non-album singles, alternative versions and mixes, foreign language recordings, the studio outtake ‘Celebrity Ball’ and, most intriguingly of all, forty-five minutes of BBC recordings in pristine sound quality.

23 Money Activities for Primary Students | Education to the Core

Give each pair of students a game board, something to use as a placeholder, and a die. One student will roll a die and move their placeholder that number of squares around the game board. Once that student has landed on a square, they will add up the coins to find the total value and then daub or cover that value on the game board. Then it is the next student’s turn. The game continues until one of the students has 5 in a row covered on the game board. This is a great early finisher activity to use during your money unit. Show me the MONEY!” (Do you now have the scene from Jerry Maguire playing in your head?🤣) Money… it is a favorite math unit in any classroom. Why? Because kids love money! Let’s take that enthusiasm and dive deeper into money skills practice. Let’s use these 23 money activities for primary students to create engaging, no prep lessons, and small group centers practice.

Credits

EDUCATIONAL: This set of 250 fake plastic US coins are great for teaching the concept of money in the classroom or at home. Pretend to shop at a store and roleplay paying with change or making change. Develop math skills while having fun. Start extending your basic money concepts into economics with direct instruction. By following a series of strategic lessons, your students can dig deeper and make connections from hands-on money skills to abstract economics concepts. Discussion questions, key vocabulary words, videos, and student practice activities help to cement and expand on the information learned. Let’s take things up a notch by teaching our students how to add together different coins with different values. They now have a firm understanding of the basics (coin identification and value for each). This is a great way to practice the counting on strategy, as your students have to hold a coin value in their heads and then add more to it. You can work on this skill in a variety of ways, and since your students are playing with “money”, they will enjoy buying things. (You can even work a student store into your unit for some real-world applications.) 7. Buying Items Take the fun from a partner game to the entire class participating. Print, laminate, and cut apart the game cards. Pass out a card to each student. The person who holds the card that states “I have the first card.” begins the game and reads the second half of their card “Who has…?”. From there, the rest of your class has to listen very carefully to the clue from their classmate to see if they have the next card. Play continues until you get to the student who has the “This is the last card.” card in their hand. The first skill we have to teach our students is to identify the coins. There are a variety of ways that you can do this. They can explicitly learn about each coin. Your students can sort the coins into groups. You can even create a center where they are grabbing a handful of coins, sorting, and then graphing how many they grabbed of each coin.

Plastic Penny - Wikipedia

Let’s wrap up all of these money skills into a project, shall we? Remember the whole group store activity I talked about in #7? What if you put the power of buying and selling in the hands of your students? This is by far the coolest money activity we do in my class all year! Your students will create their own classroom economy.

Contributors

Another option is to take this independent activity and make it a collaborative partner game. As pictured below, your students can pair up and use chips or double-sided counters as markers on the game board. Each student takes turns flipping over the card, identifying the value, and then covering it on the board. When the last card has been flipped, the student with the most covered money values wins. Once the whole group lesson is over, you can follow it up with a price tag independent practice. You can also put any of these worksheets in a center with plastic coins and your students can practice making exact change all week long. With that being said, you are preparing your students for career readiness. They learn to be responsible citizens in their classroom community. By having “a job”, they feel more connected to your classroom, therefore more likely to attend school daily, put forth more effort academically, and diminish unwanted behaviors. All skills that they will need later on in actual jobs. This project may seem like a lot of work, but I have broken it down for you in small manageable chunks through a PBL journal. This is one of those money activities your students are guaranteed to remember for years to come after leaving your classroom.



  • Fruugo ID: 258392218-563234582
  • EAN: 764486781913
  • Sold by: Fruugo

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