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K–12 teaching and learning · from the UNC School of Education

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Learning outcomes

Students will:

  • give the value of sets of coins.
  • make change using coins.
  • read and write money expressions.
  • solve simple money problems.

Teacher planning

Time required for lesson

1 hour

Materials/resources

  • Alexander Who Used to be Rich Last Sunday(Atheneum; ISBN: 0689306024) by Judith Voist
  • Overhead Coins
  • A sets of plastic coins containing pennies, nickles, dimes, quarters, and half dollars for each student or group of students

Technology resources

Overhead projector

Pre-activities

Students will practice identifying coins through daily drill on coin facts during morning calendar time. This will include facts like identifying who is on the heads side, what is on the tails side, value of the coin, words on each coin, date, and what the coin is made of.

Students will practice making various coin combinations to total different monetary amounts during morning calendar time.

Activities

The teacher will read the story Alexander Who Used to be Rich Last Sunday by Judith Voist to the class. After listening to the story, students will be given a package of plastic coins. As the teacher rereads the story, she/he will model writing the mathematical expression and then taking amounts away from $1.00 using the overhead projector and coins. Students begin with coins totaling $1.00 on their desk. Each time Alexander loses some of his money in the story, the teacher will stop and allow the students to remove that amount from the $1.00 on their desk. Discuss how much money Alexander has left each time and the various coin combinations that students could have on their desks. Continue in this manner until the end of the story when Alexander has $0.

As followup activities:

  1. Have groups or pairs of students write a story about a time they had some money and spent it. Then write the mathematical sentences that shows how the money was spent.
  2. Write a word problem about someone spending money. Exchange word problems with a partner and have students write the mathematical sentence and then solve the problem for the correct answer.

Assessment

As students are making their coin combinations the teacher will monitor their abilities. The teacher will also listen to responses to questions during the activity.

A teacher-made rubric can be used to assess this activity. See relevant web sites.

Supplemental information

None.

Related websites

http://www.4teachers.org/

Comments

None.

North Carolina Curriculum Alignment

English Language Arts (2004)

Grade 2

  • Goal 2: The learner will develop and apply strategies and skills to comprehend text that is read, heard, and viewed.
    • Objective 2.02: Use text for a variety of functions, including literary, informational, and practical.

Mathematics (2004)

Grade 2

  • Goal 1: Number and Operations - The learner will read, write, model, and compute with whole numbers through 999.
    • Objective 1.01: Develop number sense for whole numbers through 999.
      • Connect model, number word, and number using a variety of representations.
      • Read and write numbers.
      • Compare and order.
      • Rename.
      • Estimate.
      • Use a variety of models to build understanding of place value (ones, tens, hundreds).
    • Objective 1.03: Create, model, and solve problems that involve addition, subtraction, equal grouping, and division into halves, thirds, and fourths (record in fraction form).