Math Games
Overview
Math games allow students to practice many math skills in a fun, applied context. By engaging students' Attention, these games can encourage students to develop meaningful connections with content and lead to positive experiences with learning math.
Example: Use This Strategy in the Classroom
Watch how these seventh graders play a class math game to practice their math learning. Through digital games, students are highly engaged, build their math skills, and develop a love for math.
Design It into Your Product
Videos are chosen as examples of strategies in action. These choices are not endorsements of the products or evidence of use of research to develop the feature.
Learn how Blokus challenges learners to win the strategy board game by practicing their Spatial Skills. This game requires the use of geometric, spatial, and problem-solving skills.
Additional Resources
Additional examples, research, and professional development. These resources are possible representations of this strategy, not endorsements.
Factors Supported by this Strategy
More Active Learning Strategies
Students activate more cognitive processes by exploring and representing their understandings in visual form.
Analyzing incorrect worked examples is especially beneficial for helping students develop a conceptual understanding of mathematical processes.
When students explain their thinking process aloud with guidance in response to questions or prompts, they recognize the strategies they use and solidify their understanding.
Project-based learning (PBL) actively engages learners in authentic tasks designed to create products that answer a given question or solve a problem.
Response devices boost engagement by encouraging all students to answer every question.
When students create their own number and word problems, they connect math concepts to their background knowledge and lived experiences.
Analyzing and discussing solved problems helps students develop a deeper understanding of abstract mathematical processes.