School math board games
Dinosaurs rule with place value. Roll the dice to make four digit numbers. Get your dinos to their base before other players do. Set tiles up crossword style to add up to multiples of the number on a die. Connect all the numbers for a complete Sumoku! Family finance is fun in Pay Day.
Get paid and decide how to spend your money. Whoever has the most money at the end of the game wins. This classic game is for suitable for ages eight and up. Your email address will not be published. Notify me of follow-up comments by email. Notify me of new posts by email. Thank you for sharing.
Gonna put some of them on my wish list! I use games in my class a lot. Math Dash! Preschoolers practice taking turns spinning and deciding how many fruits to pick or put back. Such a fun game that includes color identification, counting, and simple addition and subtraction! Mini Motor Math Activity Set. Zoom your way through math with this hands-on racing game. Set up the numbered tracks and start your engines!
This creative game encourages color identification, counting, sorting, and simple addition and subtraction. Not to mention the colorful rubber cars are great for creative play and imagination. This adorable pup needs your help to fill up the baskets with dog bones. Infuse some fine motor fun since Shelby the dog doubles as a jumbo tweezer, perfect for picking up those slippery dog bones.
Count Your Chickens. Oh no! The baby chicks have flown the coop! Help Mama Hen get her babies back in this adorable and smart counting-based cooperative game. Short and sweet, the gameplay is about 15 minutes which is just long enough to practice counting, build team rapport, and feel success when you get the baby chicks back to the safety of the coop. A great introduction to simple board games and learning to play by the rules. Number Slap Jack. This no-prep card game uses ten frame counting dots to encourage preschoolers to notice patterns and identify numbers.
Number Slap Jack is an exciting and fast-paced way to learn number identification and counting! An absolute classic, this card game is so much fun to play and your success depends on your ability to be strategic and eliminate your cards as quickly as possible. Match one of your cards with the current card shown on top of the deck by either color or number. Use the special-action cards, like Draw Two or Skips and Reverses to try and outsmart your competition. Smack It!
Card Game for Kids. Learn to play in less than a minute with this fast-paced, intense card game, similar to the classic card game War. The card deck is divided evenly between all players and each player blindly places a card face up.
Play continues from there. The player with the highest number wins the stack. Sleeping Queens. This is an exciting and strategic math card game, perfect for building up mental addition skills. The Queens have fallen under a sleeping spell and you must work through the cards to wake them up. Look out for potions and dragons as you play, they are certainly not helpful! The player who wakes the most queens wins. Fast-paced and challenging, this card game is designed to test your spatial intelligence as they try to outsmart their competitors.
With 60 challenges of increasing difficulty, from beginner to expert, this game will continue to challenge and test kids 8 years and older. To play, players carefully study each of the 16 transparent cards laid out and try to create more matches than their opponents. The rummy-type card game with a twist has been a favorite for years and is a blast to play with the whole family.
Learn valuable money skills through fun play with this inexpensive board game. Kids will learn to combine coins to make exact amounts as they race to the finish line! This risk-taking game is fun for all ages. Roll the dice to get the best combinations possible and score the most points.
Help kids memorize their addition and subtraction facts, while learning less than, more than and equal to, as well as odd and even numbers. These vital skills are the building blocks of math, so make sure the kids really understand it by making it fun!
Use tiles to create crossword-style equations! This easy-to-learn game is perfect for the whole family! Race to get the most 3-in-a-row during this fast-paced dice game. Use strategy to win the game where doubles are WILD! This classic shake, shout and score game is the ultimate dice game! Roll a full house, straight, 3 of a kind or 4 of a kind for extra points!
Players will find adorable pets in the park, use division to feed them and earn hearts as they go. This fun division game pairs perfectly with Say Cheese Cafe, which teaches multiplication.
Race to play all of your cards before your opponents in this triangle-shaped board game. Each card is hilariously illustrated and the quick game is always a hit. This game is easy enough for children but exciting enough for adults! Compete to create rows, columns or diagonal rows of 5 using the provided checkers. One of the best-selling games of all time, this classic strategy game is fast-paced and super fun.
With more than 2, possible combinations, the game is guaranteed to be different every time you play. Who knew picking up stones could be so fun? This ancient game from Africa and Egypt can be played a few different ways. This is one of our favorite board games, although only 2 players can play at a time.
It also has two game boards so that two sets of players can be involved simultaneously. Despite these options, this game is essentially just an amplified version of completing a worksheet of fraction questions. It can only be played once students have demonstrated complete mastery of the concepts tested in the game.
Otherwise, they will become easily frustrated and the game will be tossed aside. Instead, all answers are on one answer sheet. This means that there has to be an additional player who checks the answers since alternating checking answers among the players means that they will see the answers for upcoming questions. This flaw is inconsequential if a parent is playing with children since the parent could be the person who checks the answers. However, it becomes an issue in a whole class setting where the teacher has to monitor multiple groups.
Climb the Cliff follows a question and answer format similar to Hotdogs and Hamburgers. However, each question card has three color-coded questions and the corresponding answer card. Players aim to get three questions in a row correct so that they can earn a star.
Three stars allow them to move their game pieces up the game board and over the cliff. The game is a great concept in theory. However, the design of the board is confusing and the fact that players must answer three questions in each turn contributes to prolonged game play.
These resource materials are packaged in a Math Learning Centre pouch which for up to four students. Students can test their understanding of representing and identifying fractions using the self-checking question cards. They can also use the cards and game board to challenge up to three classmates.
I consider it a valuable resource for revising. These resource materials are neatly packaged in a Math Learning Centre pouch which can serve up to four students. Students can test their understanding of equivalent fractions and adding and subtracting fractions using the self-checking question cards.
They can also use the cards and game board to challenge up to three classmates, which makes this learning center good for revising. The Adding and Subtracting Fractions Learning Center perfectly complements the All About Fractions Learning Center to give students additional practice with adding and subtracting fractions. These resources make it a good revision tool for up to four students.
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