Full description not available
Material Type | Wood |
Theme | Game,Game】the |
K**C
Math fun
My daughter was struggling with multiplication and this game really helped her.
A**
No instructions
This game came with no instructions so we couldn’t play.
S**A
No directions
I got this for a teacher friend. She had it on her wish list for her special education middle schoolers. This game came with no instructions.
C**E
Montessori instructional method math manipulative for preschool set
I sent my now adult son to Montessori preschool and for the lower elementary grades; he thrived there. S now he has two little boy who are not yet preschool age. I purchased this product after reading the reviews and finding it on a few other web sites with ore reviews. My daughter-in-law put it away for "later" which came last month. H. did not want to stop trying to "math" with this product; he is hooked. Great value for the money! The key to using this at home is if the child becomes easily frustrated, just put it away and try again in a few months. Once they are at a developmental stage where they can use it as directed, the frustration will be minimal. This is a great way to start preschoolers off learning basic math skills successfully. Math does not have to be frustrating, scary, or hard. A child who has used this in preschool will be math ready for K-2 and view math as a giant puzzle which is fun to solve. I cannot recommend this product highly enough. Great for home schooling pre-K.
H**D
"How do you play?"
The headline quote was the first thing my son said when seeing this. I think if you call something a board game, there should be some rules supplied. The only rule I could find is that young children should not handle the small parts. I found it difficult to even come up with a way to make this into a board game. Ugh.
B**D
Very helpful for our daughter
We got this for our daughter when she was trying to learn her basic multiplication. This is a great tool to have on a child's work table for quick review of their 1-10 multiplication chart. It is easy to pick up and quiz her on a few throughout the day and she has said that she finds it very helpful.There is no way to cover the answer with something on the table but it's easy to put your finger over the answer, ask the question and then show the answer. We don't really use the flash cards, although they are perfectly good review cards. I just find it easier to grab the table and pick combinations.
B**R
Easy to use for basic skill setting.
Easy to use game for my grandson who's behind in math because of Covid. I saw where reviewers we're saying there's no instructions. It doesn't really need instructions because there is no wrong way to play.My grandson and I played it. I made him pick a card. He had to guess the answer. Then he had to match the question on the board to see if he had the right answer. This way he could learn by himself with just me watching and cheering him on. Once we made up the rules and it was up to him to follow, he needed little supervision from me. It kept him busy on a rainy day for about half an hour.Some questions are hard and some are easy. He just match the pegs with the question.It's easy to use and no batteries are needed.
B**T
No instructions included but you can figure it out.
Our 3rd grader has been going through multiplication tables this year and has needed a little extra help learning them all. This board is a neat way to make learning it a bit more fun, rather than just concentrating on rote memorization. The set comes with two 10-sided dice and flash cards along with 4 game pieces that fit on to the board.Unfortunately, there were no instructions included with the game when we received it and one deck of flash cards had no rubber band on it so the cards were splattered all over the inside of the box. It looks like you roll both dice and whatever combination of two numbers that comes up, you multiply together. I guess you have to put the game piece on the board to cover the answer and then lift it up to reveal...? And we're still not sure how the flash cards fit in to the game other than to provide another visual reference for your little one to answer the question of 4 x 8 or whatever combination is rolled. Parents can probably come up with a way to make it all work, but the lack of instructions was unexpected.Also, the board only goes up to the number 10, so 10 x 10 is the max. Our little one has already progressed past that to multiplying numbers x11 through x15 in class, so this board has a limited period of usefulness. I guess it's good for a head start for anyone below 3rd grade.
Trustpilot
4 days ago
3 weeks ago