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TouchMath Review Procedures and Implementation Strategies Green Goblins

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TouchMath Review Procedures and Implementation Strategies Green Goblins Tara Discepolo Karen Gozzo-Scanlon Jen Jakiela Justin Piwonski Kelly Young SPED 517 – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: TouchMath Review Procedures and Implementation Strategies Green Goblins


1
TouchMath ReviewProcedures and Implementation
Strategies Green Goblins
Tara Discepolo Karen Gozzo-Scanlon Jen
Jakiela Justin Piwonski Kelly Young
SPED 517 12/03/07
2
Philosophy of the Program
  • TouchMath is the leading multi-sensory teaching
    approach that bridges manipulation and
    memorization.
  • Innovative math-learning system specifically
    designed to help young students develop math
    skills.
  • Instills lifelong love of math, instead of the
    fear many children feel when tackling this
    subject.
  • It works- students interact directly with
    numbers.

3
Philosophy of the Program
  • Students see, say, hear, and touch numbers in
    order to arrive with the correct answers without
    guessing.
  • Auditory reinforcement, flashcards and timed
    tests.
  • Students learn the math facts they need to
    succeed.
  • Utilizes sequential learning strategies.

4
Supporting Research using Evidence Based
Practice Identification Criteria (CEC)
  • TouchMath multisensory approach meets the
    recommendations by Gardner (1993) who has
    suggested a variety of approaches to match the
    variety of multiple intelligences in the
    classroom.
  • Scott (1993) examined the effects of a
    multi-sensory program called TouchMath with three
    (3) fourth grade students with mild disabilities.
    Her results show that it can be an effective tool
    in teaching addition and subtraction with and
    without regrouping. The subjects had success in
    maintaining and generalizing the TouchMath
    approach to other mathematical problems.  
  • Hanrahan (2000) discussed research that had
    success teaching addition and subtraction to a
    small group of mildly to moderately
    intellectually disabled children using an
    adaptation of the TouchMath approach.

5
Supporting Research using Evidence Based
Practice Identification Criteria (CEC)
  • Mather Goldstein (2001) recommended using the
    TouchMath approach with children who have
    weakness in the processing block. They benefit
    from a multi-sensory approach to learning math
    facts. The visual, auditory, and motor skills of
    the symbolic blocks are used to aid memorization.
  •  
  • Research has shown that the TouchMath approach
    appeals to children through three distinctive
    learning styles auditory, visual, and tactile.

6
Pros of Touch Math
  • Students interact directly with numbers
  • Multisensory/tactile
  • Makes math concepts visible to students
  • Free materials before you buy

7
Cons of Touch Math
  • High cost
  • Regular education teachers will need extra
    support when first implementing

8
Target Audience
  • The target audience for TouchMath is pre-K to
    12th grade and includes children with learning
    disabilities and children of different aptitudes,
    learning styles, and cultures.
  • TouchMath has become the most accepted and widely
    used basic math supplement in general classrooms,
    special education, Chapter 1 programs, and home
    learning environments, throughout the United
    States and in many foreign countries.

9
Understanding the Student
  • Does the child have difficulty comprehending
  • Math problems?
  • Is the child very concrete?
  • Does the child need visual cues to perform math
    operations easily?
  • Does the child have working memory issues?
  • Is the child behind in Mathematics?
  • Does the child have learning problems?
  • Is the child a Special Education student?
  • What is the current grade level that the
  • student is performing at?
  • What else to look at
  • Previous grade level Math tests
  • Curriculum reviews
  • Standardized tests if the child is being
  • tested for Special Education
  • CMT Scores/prior assessments.

10
Compare and Contrast
  • Class notes and text TouchMath
  • Students must be taught relevant concepts and
    meanings associated with addition and
    subtraction (Mastropieri, 2002, p. 175).
  • We need to create authentic mathematic learning
    contexts. If students do not know the meaning of
    addition and subtraction, they will have trouble
    with problem-solving examples (Mastropieri, 2002,
    p. 175).
  • Students need to learn concrete to
    representational-to-abstract instruction (C-R-A
    Instruction).
  • Addition and subtraction concepts are generally
    communicated through manipulation of concrete
    objects and use of count-ons (Mastropieri, 2002,
    p. 175).
  • If student are not instructed in math
    appropriately, they will feel anxiety, experience
    lack of motivation, and will avoid math (Prof.
    Senft, class notes).
  • Students with mathematical learning disabilities
    have trouble understanding mathematical concepts
    and executing relevant procedures and choosing
    among alternate strategies. Teachers need to
    discuss the relevance/meaning of the
    skill/concept (Prof. Senft, class notes)
  • Work Cited
  • Mastropieri, M.A., Scruggs, T.E (2002)
    Effective Instruction for Special Education (3rd
    ed.). Austin Pro-ed.

11
Compare and Contrast
  • The TouchMath program has been designed to
    cultivate rote memory skills, but the program
    also develops their understanding of underlying
    concepts.
  • We teach children to associate numerals with
    real values, actual number quantities. Children
    learn that the numeral five is not just a word or
    a squiggle on a page. The five represents
    something and has meaning (TouchMath, December 4
    2007).
  • TouchMath ensures success for students at the
    concrete level of development first. It then
    moves to a pictorial level at the students pace.
    After these needs are met, student use symbolic
    math learning, or memorization. They see, say,
    hear and touch the numbers, in order to arrive at
    the correct answers, without guessing
    (TouchMath, December 4, 2007).
  • A student receiving TouchMath once felt
    frustrated with using memorization and
    flashcards. After using TouchMath, she liked
    going to school and enjoyed math.
  • Students with mathematical learning disabilities
    using TouchMath will always have computational
    accuracy in real-life situations (TouchMath,
    December 4, 2007).
  • Work Cited
  • http//www.touchmath.com/storeworks/searchresults.
    cfm 2007 , December 4

12
Student Progress
  • Student progress can be monitored in a variety of
    ways
  • Curriculum based assessments, such as worksheets,
    projects,
  • quizzes etc. tests can also be timed.
  • Pre and post testing
  • Peer mentoring
  • Continuous evaluation will point out weaknesses
    to work on
  • Teacher feedback and encouragement
  • Visual observations
  • Have parents work with student at home to
    reinforce learning
  • As the student continues to use Touch Math, and
    math facts
  • improve, watch for his/her hand to be raised
    in response to
  • questions asked.

13
Addressing Learning Differences
  • Attention TouchMath gets children involved,
    actually having to use tactile inputs to figure
    out answers. Colorful materials also keep
    children focused and interested.
  • Spatial and Sequential Processing Students touch
    and see the numbers and can sequence them by how
    many times they touch them. Uses sequential
    learning techniques used by Jean Piaget and
    Jerome Bruner.
  • Language students associate what they see, hear,
    touch with what they say, which will help
    language. Flashcards and timed tests could be
    accommodated for if student had major language
    difficulties.

14
Addressing Learning Differences
  • Memory Touch Math is great for working memory
    because
  • the student can retain the number as they
    are counting due to
  • the multi-sensory approach of this program.
    Touch Math specializes
  • in teaching students who have difficulty
    with memory issues,
  • it is mostly targeted for students with
    short-term memory issues.
  • Higher-order thinking Lessons can be created in
    combination
  • with the Touch Math program to promote
    higher-order thinking. For
  • example, students could draw the number of
    objects on the number or
  • complete worksheets with the touch math
    number. Incorporate
  • technology, etc. I would also ask higher
    order thinking questions such as
  • Why did you touch those dots twice? If
    there was a dot with two
  • circles around it, how many times would you
    touch it?
  • Motor Skills the program incorporates fine
    motor because
  • the student uses their finger to touch the
    dots or objects on the number. Gross motor can
    be incorporated by drawing a large number and
    dots on
  • the sidewalk outside and having the child
    jump on the dots. 55055

15
  • This has been a
  • Green Goblin
  • Presentation
  • hosted by your classmates
  • Tara Discepolo
  • Karen Gozzo-Scanlon
  • Jen Jakiela
  • Justin Piwonski
  • Kelly Young


Happy Holidays!
16
  • The End
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