Clock & Money
Telling time and handling money are the math skills a child uses every day, and the ones dyscalculia hits hardest. This tool gives gentle, visual practice for both: an analog clock and real coin amounts, calm and at your child's pace.

Move the two sliders, watch the hands move, and read the time below. Same time, two ways.
What Clock & Money does
Time and money are where dyscalculia stops being abstract and starts touching daily life. An analog clock asks a child to read two scales at once on a single face; money asks them to group, swap, and add values in their head. These are exactly the steps that feel slippery when number sense works differently.
Clock & Money gives slow, visual practice for both: move the hands and see the time take shape, build a coin amount and watch it add up. Practiced gently and often, the everyday math becomes something a child can actually lean on. From kindlexy.com.
How it works
- 1
Pick a skill
Choose telling time or counting money, and a level that fits your child.
- 2
Practice visually
Move the clock hands or build a coin total and see the answer take shape, not just a right-or-wrong mark.
- 3
Print for offline practice
Print clean clock faces or coin sheets to work on by hand. Nothing leaves your device.
- 4
Keep it short
A few minutes at a time keeps it calm and low pressure, the way these skills stick.