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Counting: Coin Bank & Lazy Susan Store

 

Today's Snack: When you cut a carrot cross-wise, the little round pieces are often called "coins." So for today's snack, use the fattest carrot you can find and make the biggest carrot "coins" you can. Offer them with low-fat ranch dip.

 

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Coins

$1 bill

Paper and pen or pencil

Empty egg cartons

Child-safe kitchen cupboard or pantry

 

 

First, talk about all the things that money can, and CANNOT, buy. Put things in perspective! But recognize that coins are a tangible and practical way to teach children how to count, and the value of money.

 

Give the child a lot of coins in a jar, and help him or her separate them into pennies, nickels, dimes and quarters. Count out pennies in stacks of fives and 10s, and then put all the pennies into one compartment of an egg carton. You can call it "the bank." Write down how many pennies are in the penny compartment on a piece of paper, and show your child how you write dollars and cents. Continue with nickels, dimes and quarters, until you have all the coins separated and counted out. Show your child how you total up the four sums of coins and come up with an amount of money in the "bank."

 

Now pretend that your Lazy Susan cupboard, pantry shelf or other food storage area is a 'store," and put a "price" on each type of food container. For example, a small can might cost 3 cents, a large can 10 cents, a box 15 cents, and so on. Let your child "buy" items for a while, using the coins in the bank. Then have your child "buy" what he or she would like for dinner. Give your child a dollar bill, show on the piece of paper how you would subtract the amount that the food will cost from the dollar, and show how you would "make change" from the "bank" by giving your child back some coins. As children get older and able to do simple addition and subtraction in their heads, this game can become more and more complex.

 

Keep your egg carton "bank," and next time, change the venue to your closet. Let your child "buy" you an outfit. Shoes: 5 cents, socks, 5 cents, pants, 10 cents and so forth.

 

By Susan Darst Williams www.AfterSchoolTreats.com Preschool Activities 06 © 2008

 

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