Skip to main content Skip to main menu

The Customer Service team will be unavailable on December 24 and 25. They will return to their normal hours on Thursday, December 26.

Close

Calculating Confidence: APH’s Abacus Bee

Young student with both hands on an abacus competing in the 2022 Abacus Bee.

As STEM careers become more prevalent in the world, it is more necessary than ever to provide students with a solid foundation of skills that will support them. APH recognizes the importance of math within STEM curriculum and realizes that it can often be overlooked for students who are blind or have low vision. There are a variety of traditional learning methods used to practice math skills, such as calculators, or the use of paper and pen, but one device has been utilized for thousands of years – the abacus.

Why an Abacus?

The abacus is a manual calculating tool with beads or discs that represent digits used for basic arithmetic operations. It introduces students who are blind or low vision to early math concepts and number operations, as well as abacus terminology. It supports concepts and skills such as:

  • one-to-one correspondence
  • number sense
  • addition
  • subtraction
  • multiplication
  • division
  • procedural fluency

Abacus training is critical for children who are blind or low vision as it is useful in gaining procedural fluency, a fundamental mathematical practice involving the ability to perform mathematical procedures flexibly, accurately, and efficiently. With this accessible and manipulative tool, students can confidently navigate complex mathematical equations, fostering a deeper understanding of mathematics.

Get Your Bee On

Does this sound like something a student you know would enjoy? Want to help set up an Abacus Bee for your region? Join in the excitement and help build a fascinating world of mathematics and beyond using the Abacus Bee! Learn more about the Abacus Bee and its different events, or contact our Northcentral Region Outreach Specialist, Jennifer Brooks,​ at: Jbrooks@aph.org for more info.

Share this article.

Related articles

A student types on a Perkins Brailler sitting next to a Cranmer Abacus.

Summing Up Success: 2024 Abacus Bee Finals

APH’s Outreach Services team hosted close to 100 people in Louisville, KY on March 21-24 for a weekend of competition,...

A young boy moves the beads on a giant Cranmer abacus.

Testing Math Skills with the Abacus Bee

Created in China in 1200 C.E., the abacus is an ancient tool used by generations of mathematicians and students before...

A boy in an Abacus Bee t-shirt sits at a table using an abacus with a braillewriter to the side.

2022 Abacus Bee for Students

On Saturday, December 10, we’re hosting our first-ever Abacus Bee finals for students across the United States! Traveling from Florida...