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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.

Clock & Money illustration: an analog clock face beside a small stack of coins
Clock & Money

Move the two sliders, watch the hands move, and read the time below. Same time, two ways.

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3:00
3 o'clock

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. 1

    Pick a skill

    Choose telling time or counting money, and a level that fits your child.

  2. 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. 3

    Print for offline practice

    Print clean clock faces or coin sheets to work on by hand. Nothing leaves your device.

  4. 4

    Keep it short

    A few minutes at a time keeps it calm and low pressure, the way these skills stick.

Frequently asked questions

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What does Clock & Money do?

It gives a child gentle, visual practice for two everyday skills dyscalculia makes hard: reading an analog clock and counting money. Both can be practiced on screen and printed for offline work.
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Is it free?

Yes. Free, no signup, no account, and no usage limits. It runs right in your browser.
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Why are time and money so hard with dyscalculia?

Both rely on number sense and on holding several steps in mind at once: an analog clock mixes two scales on one face, and money means grouping and exchanging values. Practiced slowly and visually, both get much more manageable.
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What age is it for?

It works best for primary-age children building real-world math, roughly six to twelve, but you can keep it simple or stretch it as your child grows.
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Is this a diagnosis tool?

No. It is a practice aid for home use. It does not diagnose or treat dyscalculia. If you have concerns, speak with a qualified specialist.
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Does anything leave my device?

No. Everything runs locally in your browser. Nothing you set or build is uploaded or stored on a server.

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