- Using Tactile Town from APH, also Treks from APH - Using the room and having different things on each wall they can discover what's on each wall and set their own cardinal directions then drilling them to find a specific wall and checking the landmark for accuracy. -going to grocery store or dollar store using the same concept of setting cardinal directions as they find specific items on different walls or sides of the store Sheena Manuel, MBA, MAT TBS/NOMC, NCUEB Outreach Specialist Louisiana Tech University Professional Development and Research Institute on Blindness 318-257-4554
On May 12, 2016, at 11:12 AM,
wrote: Maurice,
Those are great ideas! Thank you.
Sumara
From: Maurice Peret [mailto:mperet at BISM.org] Sent: Thursday, May 12, 2016 12:07 PM To: Sumara Shakeel; NOMC at lists.nbpcb.org Subject: RE: [Nomc] seeking creative ideas for teaching compass directions to children
Greetings Sumara, I trust that this message finds you well.
I?m not sure how helpful this might or mightn?t be but I?ve sometimes used the concept of a face clock with folks struggling with cardinal directions; north being 12:00, east 3:00, south 6:00, and west 9:00. Trouble is, most people have become more accustomed to digital time devices. An idea that crept into mind, however, is perhaps circling chairs around a circle as for Musical chairs and the object might be to identify the chair at each compass point. You could do the same thing with a cake walk, have tasty treats at North, East, South, and West. Depending upon how challenging you want to get, you could even give bonuses for kids who can identify NE, SE, SW, and NW.
Hope to see you in Orlando.
Maurice From: NOMC [mailto:nomc-bounces at lists.nbpcb.org] On Behalf Of Sumara.Shakeel at dhs.state.nj.us Sent: Thursday, May 12, 2016 11:48 AM To: NOMC at lists.nbpcb.org Subject: [Nomc] seeking creative ideas for teaching compass directions to children
Hello,
We are planning activities for the children?s summer program at our state agency, and I am wondering if anyone has ideas for teaching compass directions to children as part of a map skills activity. They range in age from about six to twelve. I, of course, know how to teach compass directions but am looking for fun and creative ways to present this to children as I have worked primarily with adults.
Sumara Shakeel
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