Fostering early numerical competencies by playing conventional board games

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jecp.2020.105060Get rights and content
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Highlights

  • Playing conventional board games supports early numerical competencies.

  • Games with dot dice improved counting and structure recognition skills.

  • Beneficial effects still present one year after the intervention.

Abstract

Recent evidence indicates that playing numerical board games is beneficial for the numerical development of preschoolers. However, board games used in these studies were often specifically developed for training numerical skills. Therefore, we examined whether similar beneficial effects could be observed for playing conventional board games such as Parcheesi. In an intervention study with seven 30-min training sessions over a period of 4 weeks, we observed that 4- to 6-year-old children (Mage = 4 years 11 months) who played conventional board games with traditional number dice (with dot faces numbered from one to six) benefitted more from the board games than children who played board games with color or non-numerical symbol dice. Pretest–posttest comparisons indicated differential effects on counting skills and the ability to recognize and use structures. Beyond these immediate training effects observed in posttest, the differential beneficial effects of playing board games using traditional dot dice on recognizing and using structures was still present in a follow-up test 1 year after the intervention. Thus, playing conventional board games using traditional number dice seems to be an effective low-threshold intervention to foster early numerical competencies.

Keywords

Early numerical competencies
Board games
Intervention
Preschoolers
Informal learning
Counting skills

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