How to Teach Money Skills (5 Easy Ways to Teach SpEd Math) (2024)

How to Teach Money Skills in Special Education

For students with significant disabilities, being able to count and manage money is critical… but how do you teach money skills in special education? First things first, if you are teaching in an Autism unit, a self-contained special education classroom, or in an inclusion model with general education, there’s one thing you have to do.

You have to make time for practicing money skills in addition to the regular math curriculum.

Truth of the matter is our students often spend too little time working on functional math skills or too much time focused on a single IEP goal. It’s essential that we schedule time for independent practice of money skills as well make progress in the regular math curriculum. Just keep that in mind.

How Do You Teach Counting Money

When it comes to HOW to teach money skills to students with disabilities, there is logical progression of skills.

Master the Fundamentals

First, it’s essential to set a student up for success by helping them master the fundamentals. That means mastering 1:1 correspondence and rote counting (up to 5, 10, 20 and beyond). Notice that students don’t necessarily need to master rote counting beyond 100 to Start learning how to count money. As soon as a student is able to wrote count to 5, you can, and SHOULD, start to address money skills.

Then target coin/bill identification (the names of the coins and bills) as well as the values of each. Now, a note here for those of you stuck on a “naming coins” IEP goal you’ve rolled over for the last 2 years:

Knock It Off!

Yup, you heard me. Although naming coins is important, it’s not critical to learning how to count money. Granted, it does make things easier to call out a coin name, but in the real world, it’s not critical. Think about it;

When was the last time you were at the checkout and the cashier said “Your total is 5 dollars, two quarters and 3 pennies”?

Never.

Start Money Skills Early

Getting to work on money skills is something that should happen as soon as a student is able to target any math skills. Use money as manipulatives when you teach one to one correspondence. Use money as a discrimination task so students are familiar with them. Use money as often as possible to help students understand other math skills (even measuring objects with dollar bills).

Exposure is key.

Consider Starting with Dollars

AND to help master the fundamentals, start with dollars first for students who learn skills slowly. I know, seems counter intuitive, doesn’t it? Don’t students have to master coins to move on to bills?

Well, no. They don’t.

You can teach students bills and then at master teach that coins are part of bills and a lot of coins add up dollars. Here’s why: We need to use bills to pay in the real world. Right? You aren’t paying for your groceries with nickels and dimes. At least I hope not.

Most people use bills as their primary cash transaction currency over lots of coins. So, when possible and appropriate, start with bills and save coins for later.

Mastering 1:1 correspondence to 5 and starting to work on the values of coins and bills means it’s time to target money math for your special education students. Here’s how…

How to Teach Money Skills in Special Education

Here are the 5 steps to effectively teach money skills to students with disabilities. There is no magic here. You need to model for the student how to do each skill. Have students participate in guided practice. Finally, you’ll have the students practice independently. Here are the 5 steps:

  1. Start with Whole Dollar Amounts.
  2. Focus on Dollar Up Skills
  3. Teach Skip Counting
  4. Embed Use of Visual Supports
  5. Practice with Real World Money Activities for easy Generalization

Start with Whole Dollar Amounts.

Once your students are able to rote count to 5, you can start to work on money skills with whole dollar amounts.

We are targeting a student being able count up using money. It’s also important they start understanding the idea of adding and subtracting.

Finally, we want them to transact with whole dollar amounts.

ACTIVITIES: As a quick and easy activity, have students buy school supplies from you in your “store”. Grab some pencils, paper clips, erasers, and whatever else is within arm’s reach. Then grab a pack of sticky notes and a marker. Make a few ‘price tags’ by writing numbers on the stickies and place them next to each item. Then hand the student a stack of ones. IEP GOAL: When presented with values to the whole number, student will count out the appropriate amount using dollar bills.

And this is an easy activity to make more challenging for students as their skills develop. Add coins or take the value above five dollars. Either way, it’s easy and effective.

Focus on Dollar Up Skills

Once a student gets to independence and mastery of whole dollar transactions, start to throw in dollar up math.

What is dollar up math?

Dollar Up Math is the ability to round up an amount to the next dollar. In the real world, you do this all the time.

If something is $3.75, you dollar up to $4 so you can easily add numbers, budget your purchases, or just know how many dollars to hand the cashier.

Teaching Dollar Up to Students with Disabilities

When you’re teaching dollar up to students with disabilities, you’ll ask them to count out the whole dollar amount (ex: $2.50 needs two dollars), and then tell them to give one more (put down one extra dollar).

It’s that easy. Some student (and teachers too) get bogged down with a student needing to name the strategy, the bills, or even count independently. Truth is, in the real world, all you need to do is

  1. Identify the total’s whole number.
  2. Use 1:1 correspondence to count it out.
  3. Then add one more dollar.

This is an important skill for students who are learning how to do math with money. They need this functional math skill in the real world to have some level of independence. Plus, it’s important for students with disabilities to continue learning money skills to support their post-secondary goals (*ding, ding… IEP designation*).

ACTIVITIES: Use a dollar up mat to teach students with disabilities how to dollar up.

Better yet, use these dollar up task cards to work on dollaring up on totals up to $5.00.

The dollar mat is embedded into the task cards, making it easy for students to visualize and practice.

Teach Skip Counting

Honestly, most students with significant disabilities will have the functional skills they need to transact in cash in the real world with the skills listed above. BUT, that doesn’t mean we stop. Continue to teach money skills to students in special education by working on skip counting.

Skip counting by 5s is the most critical of them all. You can count tens, twenties, dimes, and quarters if you can skip count by fives. It’s also a skill that supports telling time. So, as you start to work on skip counting, use the learning strategies that work best for the student.

Those learning strategies may include using songs and rhymes to make skip counting sing-songy. It may include using manipulatives to rote count and understand sets of five. It may be flashcards or speed drills for review. Whatever the strategy, target skip counting by five as the next stage in money instruction for your special education students.

Embed Use of Visual Supports

You knew this one was coming, right? Students learn with visuals and hands on activities. That’s that works in special education and any education. Add a visual aid to help students understand how money relates, how to skip count, and even the names and values of coins.

I have this easy printable for you to use to do just that.

Click HERE to Get This FREE Resource!

Be specific on how you want to help a student when you choose visuals. Also, consider how some supports need to be taught in order to be used effectively.

Don’t just slap a printable down like *BAM* and then walk away.

Model, practice, and then practice some more.

Final note on visual supports. For students with significant disabilities, sometimes those visual supports are permanent supports. In other words, a student can only do the skill with the support always present. That’s okay.

How to Teach Money Skills (5 Easy Ways to Teach SpEd Math) (6)
Click HERE to Get This FREEBIE!

If a student needs a counting mat to be successful, GREAT! We know what they need to be successful and they have the capacity to be successful.

Yipee!

Now we just have to figure out a way to make that support available for them in real world settings. We also need to make sure that support is real-world appropriate. We don’t want a 25-year-old person with a disability counting their money on a Paw Patrol dollar up mat because that’s what he learned on. Consider the appropriateness of the visuals as students transition to older grades and the post-secondary.

Practice with Real World Money Activities for Easy Generalization

Students with disabilities will need regular practice with their money skills in order to reinforce skill acquisition. That practice will also help students get to mastery and generalize beyond the classroom. In order to do that and keep it fresh, be consistent with using a variety of engaging real-world activities at independent centers or work stations during math time.

If you’re looking for materials that are fresh, engaging, and mirror real world situations, check out these resources.

How to Teach Money Skills (5 Easy Ways to Teach SpEd Math) (7)
How to Teach Money Skills (5 Easy Ways to Teach SpEd Math) (8)

What is the best way to teach money?

There you have it. When it comes to HOW to teach money skills to students with disabilities, there are five simple steps. Before you begin, start with some solid prerequisite skills, like being able to rote count to 5. Then follow the five steps:

1: Start with Whole Dollar Amounts; 2: Focus on Dollar Up Skills; 3: Pre-Teach Skip Counting; 4: Embed Use of Visual Supports; and 5: Practice with Real World Money Activities for Easy Generalization.

Be sure to use materials that are similar to real world situations so skills meet a student’s functional goals and needs.

Keep it fresh, fun, and functional and you’ll be successful at teaching students money skills in the classroom.

How to Teach Money Skills (5 Easy Ways to Teach SpEd Math) (2024)

FAQs

How to Teach Money Skills (5 Easy Ways to Teach SpEd Math)? ›

Special education teachers can help their students learn money skills by using the match, sort, and select technique, or by skip counting on a number chart to practice counting coins. Supplement your teaching with fun activities like shopping with newspaper ads and counting money to solve word problems.

How do you teach money skills to special education students? ›

Special education teachers can help their students learn money skills by using the match, sort, and select technique, or by skip counting on a number chart to practice counting coins. Supplement your teaching with fun activities like shopping with newspaper ads and counting money to solve word problems.

How do you teach basic money skills? ›

Toddlers
  1. Set up a pretend store. ...
  2. Read books about money. ...
  3. Practice identifying coins and bills. ...
  4. Use a clear container for their savings. ...
  5. Talk to your kids about money. ...
  6. Let them buy things with their money. ...
  7. Let them make choices with their money. ...
  8. Pay them for the work they do around the house.

How to teach sped students math? ›

Use visual and auditory examples. Use real-life situations that make problems functional and applicable to everyday life. Do math problems on graph paper to keep the numbers in line. Use uncluttered worksheets to avoid too much visual information.

How do you teach math money? ›

Create a chart that has 100 squares, labeling each square in sequence with the numbers one through 100. Give your child a handful of different coins and tell them to place each one on the square representing the total value, having them begin with the highest-value coin and working their way down.

How to teach budgeting to special education students? ›

Go around and have each group choose a budget from the bowl full of the money amounts on slips of paper. Pass out one grocery store list/menu to each group. Explain to students that they will have to work together to decide how their going to spend their money at the grocery store and still stay within their budget.

How do you teach an autistic child about money? ›

Pay on the same day each week. Pay the same amount each week in the same denominations (A five dollar bill every week rather than sometimes a five dollar bill, sometimes five one dollar bills). Teach the value of what money can and can't buy — Play “store” at home and count out money in exchange for goods.

How do you teach math to autistic students? ›

Teach math concepts through visual examples and pair them with verbal instructions for those that are partially verbal or non-verbal. Make teaching math fun by playing games with flash cards, apps, or an online curriculum. Use technology to help those students whose fine motor skills aren't as developed.

How can I make math teaching fun? ›

  1. Organizing fun Math Games. Teachers can bring positivity, excitement, and fun to a class by adding fun math games. ...
  2. Using charts, picture books, and other visual aids. ...
  3. Use real objects to make Math fun. ...
  4. Physical involvement. ...
  5. Make a fixed routine. ...
  6. Co-relate different Subjects to make Math fun Subject.
May 16, 2022

How to teach a kid money? ›

When they're little
  1. Introduce the value of money.
  2. Emphasize saving.
  3. Introduce them to investing.
  4. Encourage a summer job.
  5. Introduce them to credit.
  6. Consider a Roth IRA.
  7. Help them set a budget.
  8. Encourage them to stay invested.

What is an example of money in math? ›

For example, 18 rupees and 30 paise can be written as 18.30. We know that Rs. 1 = 100 paise. So, to convert rupees into paise, we multiply the amount by 100.

How is math used in money? ›

From saving and budgeting to understanding interest rates, the foundations of financial literacy are firmly rooted in mathematical concepts. Teach kids about percentages when calculating discounts, fractions when dividing a budget, and multiplication when determining savings over time.

How do you teach students the value of money? ›

How to Teach Preschoolers and Kindergartners About Money
  1. Use a clear jar for their savings. ...
  2. Set an example with your own money habits. ...
  3. Show them stuff costs money. ...
  4. Show them how opportunity cost works. ...
  5. Give commissions, not allowances. ...
  6. Avoid impulse buys. ...
  7. Stress the importance of giving. ...
  8. Teach them contentment.
Jan 9, 2024

What is financial literacy for students with disabilities? ›

WHAT ARE FINANCIAL LITERACY SKILLS? Students with disabilities need to understand the concepts of earning, budgeting, and borrowing. For earning, they need to understand their pay and benefits.

How do you introduce money to students? ›

Try these hands-on activities to introduce younger learners to the concept of money, learn bills and coins, and more.
  1. Introduce money basics. ...
  2. Put together money puzzles. ...
  3. Show kids how to keep their money safe. ...
  4. Craft a water bottle piggy bank. ...
  5. Take the Piggy Bank Quiz. ...
  6. Buy some chips to practice counting money.
Mar 11, 2022

Which is the most suitable strategy to teach the skill of addition of money? ›

Role play is the most suitable strategy to teach the skill of the addition of money. The learner should however concentrate on how accurately he/she thinks through the mind of the person or model whose role is being played.

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