Playing linear number board games, those where players move pieces along a straight numbered path, can significantly strengthen young children’s math skills, according to a new report by the HEDCO Institute for Evidence-Based Educational Practice at the UO.
Even better, the report found just a few short, 10-minute sessions of game play may have lasting benefits.
The findings are from a meta-analysis, or systematic review, of 18 studies looking at number board games and early math skills in children preschool through second grade.
“We selected this topic because early math skills are a powerful predictor of children’s later success in school, and number board games are easy to use and affordable,” said Gena Nelson, associate research professor at the Center on Teaching and Learning at the UO’s College of Education.

The easy-to-read report, “Evidence-Based Ways to Play: Linear Number Board Games Support Numeracy Skills for Young Children,” focuses on games that are backed by credible research, sifting them out of hundreds of game ideas available online.
Examples include The Great Race from the Early Childhood Interaction Lab at the University of Maryland and resources from the DREME Family Math and the Center for Family Math.
The report includes links to The Great Race and other downloadable games and resources.
HEDCO Institute researchers Nelson and Marah Sutherland undertook this systematic research review hoping to incorporate features from some of the best number board games into those they’re designing for their own research study of board play for children with disabilities.
“We are testing a set of original number games, storybooks with math themes, and math conversational prompts to be used in the home with parents who have a 3- to 5-year-old child with a disability,” said Sutherland, research associate at the UO’s Center on Teaching and Learning. “Something that we learned from our meta-analysis was the need for early math activities to be highly adaptable based on children’s readiness for learning about different numbers.”
She said they integrated that into the design of their own number board games by providing different levels and optional math challenges for parents to incorporate, depending on the math skills of their child.
“The response from parents about using the adaptable math activities at home with their children with diverse learning needs has been overwhelmingly positive,” she said.





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