Games like Chutes & Ladders require players to count out the spaces along which they move their tokens at each turn. Earlier studies have pointed to the benefits to young children of playing games that require counting.
The new study by Boston College and Carnegie Mellon University researchers suggests the simple act of playing a number game may not yield the benefits earlier studies have detailed.
What matters is how children count while they play, said Boston College Assistant Professor of Education Elida Laski and Carnegie Mellon Professor of Psychology Robert S Siegler.
"What's most important is whether you count within a larger series of numbers, or simply start from one each time you move a piece," Laski added.
The researchers tested two counting methods in a study of 40 children who played a 100-space board game designed by the researchers to mimic products like Chutes & Ladders.
In the first method, referred to as "count-from-1", children started counting from the number one each time they moved a piece.
The process of counting on allows children to develop their ability to encode the relationship between numbers and spaces. That, in turn, improved their abilities to estimate the size of numbers on number lines, identify numbers and to count-on.
Playing the same game, the standard "count-from-1" method led to considerably less learning, the researchers found.
In a second experiment, the researchers found that students who practiced encoding numbers 1 through 100 via methods beyond a board game showed no appreciable gain in number line estimation.
Instead, parents and teachers need to direct children's attention to the numbers on the game boards to realise those benefits, researchers said.
The study was published in the journal Developmental Psychology.
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