
As television and electronic games take up increasingly larger portions of children's play time, we may be inadvertently depriving kids of important tools for learning. Puzzles and board games, a staple of our own childhoods, serve several important educational functions in the lives of young children.
"Babies and young children learn through play." Penelope Leach, author and noted specialist in child development, voices the convictions of early childhood educators everywhere in this simple statement. While playthings like puzzles or board games may seem like a waste of time, or dull compared to the glitz of electronic media, children love them. And they provide kids with an opportunity to learn and practice many skills important for success in school.
Learning with puzzles
Puzzles help children learn to solve problems. By trying several ways to fit a puzzle piece in place, they are learning the value of flexible thinking, and of persistence. Their fine motor skills are sharpened by manipulating the pieces and fitting them in their proper space. Putting together a puzzle helps children actively practice important skills such as inference, deductive reasoning, and the notion that whole objects are generally made up of parts.
Learning with board games
Board games, like puzzles, help young children learn problem solving skills. Unlike puzzles, board games require interaction with other people and therefore help children learn the importance of taking turns, sharing, and even the experience of winning and losing. They begin to understand the concept of strategy as a factor in playing to win. Games with dice, or with tokens that progress around a path, help children learn number recognition and make the concrete connection to the meaning of numerical concepts. Children responding to "Move two spaces" or "Go back three" are actually learning simple addition and subtraction.
The educational value of puzzles and games is enhanced when parents and children play them together. Puzzles and games provide an enjoyable means for you to share your child's delight in learning through play--one of the most important tasks of childhood.
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