Math Mammoth European Money is a worktext that covers money-related topics usually encountered during grades 1-3 . The book contains both textbook explanations and exercises, and is designed to be very easy to teach from, requiring very little teacher preparation .The book starts with first-grade topics such as counting coins with cent-amounts and easy problems about change. For the most part, these lessons use "c" as a symbol for cents. I realize there is no official symbol for euro cents, but when young children are learning to count coins, it is much more natural to count them as cent-amounts, and not use the euro symbol, such as in €0,08, to mean 8 cents.While these initial lessons use pictures for the coins, practising with real coins is even better, and you should have those on hand to practise with.From there, the lessons advance toward second-grade, and finally to third grade topics, such as practising with euro amounts and figuring out the total cost and change. Therefore, you can also let your child work the pages of this book in different time periods, and not go through it all at once, depending on your child's current level.Making Change explains two basic ways of finding the counting up, and subtracting . This is all done with mental maths. The next lesson also practices money problems using mental maths.In the last lesson, we solve money problems by adding and subtracting money amounts vertically .
Math Mammoth European Money is a worktext that covers money-related topics usually encountered during grades 1-3 . The book contains both textbook explanations and exercises, and is designed to be very easy to teach from, requiring very little teacher preparation .The book starts with first-grade topics such as counting coins with cent-amounts and easy problems about change. For the most part, these lessons use "c" as a symbol for cents. I realize there is no official symbol for euro cents, but when young children are learning to count coins, it is much more natural to count them as cent-amounts, and not use the euro symbol, such as in €0,08, to mean 8 cents.While these initial lessons use pictures for the coins, practising with real coins is even better, and you should have those on hand to practise with.From there, the lessons advance toward second-grade, and finally to third grade topics, such as practising with euro amounts and figuring out the total cost and change. Therefore, you can also let your child work the pages of this book in different time periods, and not go through it all at once, depending on your child's current level.Making Change explains two basic ways of finding the counting up, and subtracting . This is all done with mental maths. The next lesson also practices money problems using mental maths.In the last lesson, we solve money problems by adding and subtracting money amounts vertically .