Add some hands on fun to your numeracy sessions with these simple UNO starter games.
A little bit of context...
During our first week of homeschooling I've tried hard to get a nice balance between written work, eLearning, hands on learning and, just as crucial, good old play. Much to my surprise, one of my favorite childhood games, UNO has proved to be a great resource for some fun hands on Math starters with my first grader. He's loved just playing the game with me, so I took that engagement and used it at the start of our Math sessions for some simple starters. These are not intentioned to stretch him academically, but simply to help the transition to starting Math work occur in a smooth and fun way. I've also included a few of my older ideas which I'm looking forward to trying with 3 yr old baby sis over the coming weeks.
1. UNO Towers
How to set up: separate your UNO cards into four color piles with numbers 1-9 in each color, shuffled. Supply a bowl of red, blue, green and yellow link cubes.
How it works: ask your child to flip one card from each color pile and build a matching tower. Stand the towers on the UNO cards. Ask your child to tell you the colors and numbers of each tower in full sentences. Finally, challenge your child to add the total number of link cubes together by building a mega tower.
For younger kids: just flip one UNO card at a time and ask your little one to match the color and number on the card by building a single tower. Depending on their age you can offer the appropriate amount of guidance.
For older kids: use the colored towers for more complex Math such as subtraction, multiplication and even division.
2. Quick-fire Whiteboard UNO Problems
What you need: UNO cards, mini whiteboard and dry erase marker.
How to set up: remove all speciality cards from the deck. Write the necessary symbols on the whiteboard, leaving room for the cards. You can see above that we were working on subtraction, so we had '-' and '=' symbols.
How it works: ask your child to flip two cards and put them either side of the symbol of the whiteboard. Ask them to read the problem out loud before writing their answer. I was doing this with a first grader so the 1-9 numbers made this relatively simple. To make it slightly more challenging I encouraged him to do it as quickly as possible.
For younger kids: just flip one UNO card at a time and ask your little one to call out the color, or if they are a little older they can call out the color and number.
For older kids: why not put a timer on and see how many sums they can complete in one minute. And of course you can also change the symbols to do a more challenging problem such as multiplication.
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