Numberaid teaching abacus

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Record 25/76
Copyright Museum of the American Printing House for the Blind
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Artist Milsco Manufacturing Company
Credit line Museum Purchase, 2006.15.
Date ca. 1955
Description Numberaid abacus in original box with instruction manual; black plastic slotted foot and top; five vertical gray plastic rods with a gray plastic shelf separation the top row of beads from the lower row; two beads on rods above the shelf, nine beads below the shelf; left to right, beads are translucent blue, yellow, white, red, and green; an aluminum sliding indicator bar is wrapped around the top; embossed in white on frame, "Numberaid/MANUFACTURED AND DISTRIBUTED BY/MILSCO MANUFACTURING CO. Milwaukee, Wis./An Arithmetic Learning Aid Designed For Burroughs Corporation."; yellow and blue cardboard box with drawing of the product and a child using one on the lid; 120 p. stabled softbound instruction manual.
Dimensions H-1.125 W-5.25 D-5.125 inches
Dimension notes overall in box; numberaid alone is 4.75" T x 4.875" W x .875" D
Made Milwaukee, WI
Material Plastic, paper, aluminum
Object ID 2006.15
Object Name Abacus
Place of Origin Milwaukee, WI
People Schott, Andrew F.
Provenance/History The commercial version of an abacus designed by educator Andrew F. Schott. Schott developed an elementary school mathematics curriculum known as individualized mathematics in the mid 1950s which was adopted by schools all over the country. In the early 1960s, Carson Nolan and the research department at APH began studying the possibility of adapting Schott's system in schools for the blind. An abacus developed by Schott, the Numberaid, and a number of other devices, the Calculaid, measureaid (a ruler and protractor), fractionaid, geometraid were eventually listed in the APH catalog along with braille and large type texts. The testing ended inconclusively in the late 1960s, although the numberaid continued to be sold at late as 1979.
Subjects Mathematics.
Arithmetic.
Blind.
Education.
Aids for the blind and visually handicapped.
Instructional aids, tools, and supplies.
Title Numberaid teaching abacus
Image Courtesy Museum of the American Printing House for the Blind. Note: use of some materials may be restricted, please call before publishing in any format.

For more information contact the museum at 502-899-2365    museum@aph.org
Last modified on: April 02, 2010