Keep #Math #Games Simple
No one enjoys math games with a million pieces or hard-to-understand directions. It's hardly a smart use of your instructional time if you have to spend 15-20 minutes explaining how to play a game, and the students probably will not remember anyway.
Look for games that require little preparation and have clear directions. It's good to have games that can be customized for different ability levels. War, for example, is a game that may be used to compare single-digit numbers, multi-digit integers, fractions, products, and even geometric characteristics.
Here are a few examples of well-known games: Scoot, Race to Infinity, Bump, Smath, Four-in-a-Row, Math Noodler, Math War, Math Jeopardy, Math Slam, Q.bitz Jr., Mathable, and I Have/Who Has, Yahtzee
Have #fun!
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