2024 the best occupation review


Price: $40.63
(as of Nov 28, 2024 14:45:08 UTC - Details)

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Get 115 photographic cards that contain both male and female depictions of today's most common occupations. The images are current and familiar, and are featured in natural settings. Each 3 1/2 x 5" card has suggested activities on its back. Includes activity booklet.
Hi-gloss cards
Made in USA
Designed to teach basic language skills such as:
Receptive Language ("show me the fireman")
Expressive Language ("He is a waiter")
Gender Identification
Pronouns (He/She)
Reviewer: TOG
Rating: 5.0 out of 5 stars
Title: Great for home school
Review: Nice and fun way for kids to learn

Reviewer: Amazon Customer
Rating: 5.0 out of 5 stars
Title: Five Stars
Review: fun

Reviewer: savannah
Rating: 2.0 out of 5 stars
Title: Out dated pictures
Review: I like that it has both male and female examples of several occupations but the pictures look like they were taken in the 90s

Reviewer: Teresa Bruni-Dipietro
Rating: 5.0 out of 5 stars
Title: Five Stars
Review: Great for my Primary Autism classroom.

Reviewer: ScotFlower
Rating: 3.0 out of 5 stars
Title: not enough
Review: I liked this set, but I did not love it. I thought there would be more careers presented, but you get two cards for each career so its HALF what I was expecting for the price.First of all, I liked that the vast majority of jobs are shown both for males and females (which is an essential improvement to showing only male doctors and female nurses). The only jobs not shown as both male and female were ones like astronaut or race car driver or clown in which the person was so covered up that it could represent either gender just fine. However, by showing both male and female examples on separate cards, it does halve the number of careers presented. The manufacturer should therefore increase the careers offered either by increasing the total number of cards, by putting both the male and female examples on the same card, or keep the name number by combining all those separate sports names into a card for athletes thus freeing up space.Second, I liked that the cards showed some diversity. The images looked just like the people we actually know doing these jobs. My mom just saw an African American female eye doctor for example and the local bakers are Latino. So we appreciated that the diversity we see in real life was presented here, but I still think it could go a step further. Where are the Southern Asian pharmacists for example? We have a lot of them in our area.Third, some images are not very clear as to the person's job and/or are outdated. For example: a man standing at a computer is a bank teller does not show anything in the image that makes you think bank not even money. Plus, he is not standing behind bulletproof glass which does not match any bank I know. So basically the image looks like it is from the 1980s to early 1990s.Fourth, there are no religious figures like priest, pastor, etc. An extra blank card is provided as a distractor, but if your family is religious, you could attach a photo to the blank card to represent a job within your faith.Fifth, there are no descriptions of what that person does in their job so you learn the names for a job that is not clear. You cannot learn to distinguish jobs unless you know WHAT they do etc. I really think these cards should have come with short job or career descriptions.Some side things I would change. I would call the store clerks as cashiers instead, but this was not written on the back of the card. The back of the waiter cards should have a slash waitress.... and the baseball card a slash softball.Careers this box does not include, BUT I wish it did and should be updated to include in my opinion are: homemakers, childcare workers/babysitters, secretary/personal assistant, pharmacists, politicians, sanitation workers (like garbage pick up and recycling), social workers (since so many kids are in the system), computer programmers, park rangers, inventors, manufacturers, actors, fashion designer/seamstress, accountant, home decorator, painter (like in construction), carpenter/woodworking, counselor/psychologist/psychiatrist, writer/author, stock clerks (use fork lifts in warehouses), etc. I would also like managers but that will be a hard thing to show in a photo. Personally, I feel that if you add more variety to the careers, then you can hand pick what your particular individuals need to learn. If they are in and out of courts and foster care obviously you would pick a certain set of cards to help them manage those experiences... if they live with a scientist mom and a computer programmer dad then you would pick another set of cards for those experiences. Given that we watch zero sports for example, this box has a lot of cards we won't ever use.Overall, it is good for kids to see all kinds of people doing all kinds of jobs. I loved that it included both male and female images for nearly every career, but I felt the variety was limited and there were no descriptions of what people did in those jobs.

Reviewer: Oliver DeMille, TJEd
Rating: 5.0 out of 5 stars
Title: Great for SpEd
Review: We have a 16yo son with CP who attends a class with several other youth with cognitive/developmental/functional delays, and this card set is excellent as a language activity! The cards are sturdy, with a glossy finish, and the back of the card has a guide for record keeping and managing activities for the students. Images provided for example. Very nice quality and excellent in details.

Reviewer: Ximena Garcia
Rating: 4.0 out of 5 stars
Title: It is a great idea to teach the female and male name of ...
Review: It is a great idea to teach the female and male name of every occupation, but there are times when men and women are called same; example; baker, so I consider they should have written male/female in the back of cards and to have included many more pictures of different occupations or to have included professions.

Reviewer: Teacher Mom
Rating: 4.0 out of 5 stars
Title: Good card set for vocabulary instruction and practice
Review: I chose these cards to use with English learners at the middle school level. There is a large variety of professions represented on the cards, and many of them have both male cards and a female card, although some have just one or the other. There is a notation section on the back of each card so that you can write down when you first introduced it, and then the date of mastery as well. It's a good idea if you're using the set with just one child, but when using with a class, that space isn't useful.There are 115 different cards, which make quite a variety to choose from. The cards are approximately the size of baseball trading cards. The box they come in is way larger than necessary, and is partially filled with cardboard to prevent them from shifting around.The cards are nice overall, but based on the design of the box, I thought they would be very colorful. They aren't. They are in color, but the color is muted, and not vibrant at all. The photos seem modern-ish, but because of the lack of vibrancy, they feel flat and out of date.

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