Skip navigation View an alternate layout of this website with limited styles and no horizontal scrolling
Menu
Skip to Related Links

GEOMETRY TEACHING AID     

Return to Search Results

Record 5 of 9.

« Previous Product     Next Product »      


0 consumer reviews. Login to rate this product.

--- DO IT YOURSELF ENTRY --- PURPOSE: To demonstrate the difference between various types of angles for young children with vision disabilities. This technique was developed by a third-grade student who is blind for teaching younger children. The student uses his folding travel cane to demonstrate a right angle, showing the other students that if the corner of a piece of paper fits in the angle between two sections of the cane, a right angle has been created. If the angle is smaller than the right angle, it is an acute angle. If a larger angle is created, there will be room left over when the corner of the piece of paper is inserted, and the angle is obtuse. Also, because the cane has four sections of equal length, it can be used to discuss the properties of squares. It can also be used to demonstrate a triangle with three acute angles. MATERIALS: Folding travel cane and a sheet of paper. TITLE: Austin’s Angles: Using the Folding Cane to Teach Geometry (in Springboard). AUTHOR: Ingle, A. JOURNAL: RE:view. Vol 37 no 1, Spring 2005: p. 27-29. PAGES (including cover): 4 2005.

Notes: The RE:view Journal is included in the collection of the National Rehabilitation Information Center (NARIC).

This product record was updated on September 22, 2006.

See more "Do It Yourself" products.
« Previous Product     Next Product »      
Return to Search Results

Record 5 of 9.


View discontinued Products (6)

AbleData, 8630 Fenton Street, Suite 930, Silver Spring, MD 20910. 1-800-227-0216.
Maintained for the National Institute on Disability and Rehabilitation Research of the U.S. Dept. of Education
by ICF Macro under Contract No. ED-04-CO-0018/0007.

The records in AbleData are provided for information purposes only. Neither the U.S. Department of Education nor ICF Macro has examined, reviewed, or tested any product, device, or information contained in AbleData. The Department and ICF Macro make no endorsement, representation, or warranty express or implied as to any product, device, or information set forth in AbleData. The views expressed on this site do not necessarily represent the opinions of the Department of Education, the National Institute on Disability and Rehabilitation Research, or ICF Macro.