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TOUCH MATH

 

TouchMath is a math program specifically designed to help young students develop math skills. The program is a multi-sensory approach to learning and helps take away that fear many children feel when tackling this subject.

 

TouchMath works because students physically touch the numbers.  They see it , say it, hear it and touch it.  It takes the guessing out of math.

 

Each number from 1 through 9 has Touch Points corresponding to the digit’s quantity:

*Numerals 1 through 5 use single Touch Points

*Numerals 6 through 9 use double TouchPoints

*Students touch single TouchPoints once and double TouchPoints twice.

 

By touching the TouchPoints and counting aloud, Touch Math uses the multi-modality approach and focuses on the visual learner, the auditory learner and the kinesthetic learner.

 

 

--The one is touched at the top while counting: "One."

           

--The two is touched at the beginning and the end of the

            numeral while counting: "One, two."

        

--The three is touched at the beginning, middle and end

           of the numeral while counting: "One, two, three."

 

 

--The four is touched and counted from top to bottom on

          the down strokes while counting: "One, two, three, four."

 

--The five is touched and counted in the sequential order

           pictured: "One, two, three, four, five."

           Memory Cue: To help in remembering the fourth Touch Point,

           it may be referred to as the "belly button."

 

--The six begins the use of dots with circles. The encircled

          dots should be touched and counted twice, whenever they

          appear. Six is touched and counted from top to bottom:

          "One-two, three-four, five-six."

          Memory Cue: Touch at the top, middle, bottom.

 

 

--The seven is also touched and counted top, middle, bottom:

           "One-two, three-four, five-six," followed by the single dot:

           "seven."

           Memory Cue:  The single Touch Point can be thought of as the nose.

 

 

--The eight is touched and counted from left to right:

           "One-two, three-four, five-six, seven-eight."

           Memory Cue:  Tell the young students that the eight

           looks like a robot. Count his eyes first, then his arms.

 

--The nine is touched and counted from top to bottom:

           "One-two, three-four, five-six, seven-eight," followed by

           the single dot: "nine."

           Memory Cue: Tell the young students that the nine

           is the tallest number and the only number with a "hat".  

 

 

 

 

 

*Images and Touch Point explanations courtesy of Touch Math.*