Lately, my son is fascinated with money. I know, you think I
mean spending it, right? Nope. He wants to know who’s on each bill and loves
the ‘secret’ watermarks you see when you hold the newly designed bills up to
the light.
To give him a little practice counting bills, though, I
decided to make some funny money for him. (I wasn’t about to risk him losing
all of our Monopoly money.)
I printed several sheets of each denomination (1s,
5s, 10s, 20s, 50s, and 100s) on cardstock.
Once I cut the bills apart, it was time I put on my acting
hat. I admit; I was pretty rusty (the last time I acted was in an 8th-grade
school play). Thankfully, my son isn’t a tough critic.
Download
the clown-faced funny money here. If you’d rather add your child’s picture to the bills like I did, e-mail me and I’ll send you the Microsoft Publisher files to adapt. |
I told him to pretend he worked at a bank and gave him a (shuffled)
random amount of money. He needed to sort the funny money into piles and put
the piles in order from smallest to largest denomination. Next, he counted each
pile.
I made three columns in his notebook. Down the first column,
I wrote each denomination. Over the second column, I wrote “how many?” And
under the third column I wrote “how much $?” His task was to write down the
number of bills he had in each pile and figure out how much money that amounted
to (essentially how much money was “in the bank”). I added all his subtotals up for him.
Then, I held a stick up with a small toy squirt gun (don’t
worry, it wasn’t loaded). My son thought I was being funny until I took some bills from each
of his piles; then, his jaw dropped.
Now it was time to count the money again, recording the
values once more in his notebook. After counting each denomination, he’d look at the
previous numbers and tell me things like, “You took three ten-dollar bills.”
After he’d recounted his money, I told him that the police had
caught the crook and recovered the money; however, he needed to count it to make
sure that they got all the money back.
This was SO much fun that my son never complained about all
the counting and subtracting. It really put his skip-counting skills to the
test, too. Success!
Love it! Great chance for role play that might be a little more up a boy's alley.
ReplyDeleteVery cute idea
ReplyDeleteI LOVE this!! The money is adorable, and the 'word problem' is a fantastic idea. Way to make learning fun!! Thanks for linking up!
ReplyDeleteWhat a great idea! Counting money has really been challenging for my second grader, this should make it fun.
ReplyDeleteI' like very much the Microsoft Publisher files ;)
ReplyDeleteMany thanks!
panka1975@gmail.com
I LOVE this idea! My boys would have so much fun! Would you please send me the Microsoft Publisher Files please!
ReplyDeleteThanks so much!!
brittamac@hotmail.com
Hi, could you send me the publisher files to make the money?
ReplyDeleteThanks
galega@gmail.com
Can you please send me the file to add a child's picture to? Such a cute idea!
ReplyDeleteThanks!
Pam
pjpowell@carolina.rr.com
Hi there,
ReplyDeleteYour ideas are amazing.... thank you so much for sharing them. My kids are going to love doing these games.
Could you kindly send me the money file when you have a chance? My e-mail add is ruiandcarla@gmail.com
Many many thanks.
Carla
Can you please send me the file to add a child's picture to? Such a cute idea!
ReplyDeleteThanks!
Tina
coolmom07@gmail.com
ooohhhh! Could I please have the file?
ReplyDeleteclairebirbeck@live.com
Thank you!! :)