(Press-News.org) Playing linear number board games, those where players move pieces along a straight numbered path, can significantly strengthen young children’s math skills, according to a new report by the HEDCO Institute for Evidence-Based Educational Practice at the UO.
Even better, the report found just a few short, 10-minute sessions of game play may have lasting benefits.
The findings are from a meta-analysis, or systematic review, of 18 studies looking at number board games and early math skills in children preschool through second grade.
“We selected this topic because early math skills are a powerful predictor of children’s later success in school, and number board games are easy to use and affordable,” said Gena Nelson, associate research professor at the Center on Teaching and Learning at the UO’s College of Education.
“This review shows that brief play sessions with linear-number board games can meaningfully improve foundational early math skills like counting, number recognition and understanding quantity,” she said.
The review found a 76 percent chance that playing these games will improve numeracy — the ability to understand and use numbers — if the children and games are like those in the studies. Numeracy includes skills like counting in order, counting each item in a set only once, and understanding that the last number counted refers to the total number of objects in the set.
The findings are relevant for educators and homeschoolers looking for activities proven to help students, as well as family members and mentors who want to have fun with the children in their lives while also supporting their learning.
The easy-to-read report, “Evidence-Based Ways to Play: Linear Number Board Games Support Numeracy Skills for Young Children,” focuses on games that are backed by credible research, sifting them out of hundreds of game ideas available online.
Examples include The Great Race from the Early Childhood Interaction Lab at the University of Maryland and resources from the DREME Family Math and the Center for Family Math.
The report includes links to The Great Race and other downloadable games and resources.
HEDCO Institute researchers Nelson and Marah Sutherland undertook this systematic research review hoping to incorporate features from some of the best number board games into those they’re designing for their own research study of board play for children with disabilities.
"We are testing a set of original number games, storybooks with math themes, and math conversational prompts to be used in the home with parents who have a 3- to 5-year-old child with a disability,” said Sutherland, research associate at the UO’s Center on Teaching and Learning. “Something that we learned from our meta-analysis was the need for early math activities to be highly adaptable based on children's readiness for learning about different numbers.”
She said they integrated that into the design of their own number board games by providing different levels and optional math challenges for parents to incorporate, depending on the math skills of their child.
“The response from parents about using the adaptable math activities at home with their children with diverse learning needs has been overwhelmingly positive," she said.
— By Joe Golfen, HEDCO Institute for Evidence-Based Educational Practice, College of Education, University of Oregon
END
Board games boost young kids’ math skills, UO research review shows
Kids learn as they move game pieces along a numbered path
2026-01-13
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
Unleashing floods: Researchers learn more about how fossils form
2026-01-13
MINNEAPOLIS / ST. PAUL (01/12/2026) — A new study by researchers at the University of Minnesota Twin Cities challenges previous classifications paleontologists use to determine how the fossil record is formed. They investigated how dinosaur and mammal bones are transported and buried by floodwaters to understand how the remains of animals might disperse prior to being buried and becoming fossils.
The research provides new clues for understanding animal extinction and environmental changes. The paper was recently published in Paleobiology, ...
An open-source robotic system to perform cell culture tasks
2026-01-13
An automated cell culture system reduces hands-on time and improves seeding consistency in 96-well microplates. Manuel Leonetti, Rafael Gómez-Sjöberg, and colleagues developed the Automated Cell Culture Splitter, an open-source robotic system built around the Opentrons OT-2 liquid handling robot equipped with a custom cell counting imaging instrument. The system automates passaging—the transfer of cells from one culture plate to another when they grow too numerous—of either adherent or suspended cells in 96-well plates, a process conventionally requiring tedious manual work. The authors tested the system with a commonly ...
Fathers’ health influences offspring through sperm RNAs
2026-01-13
A study in mice on small RNAs in sperm helps explain how the health of fathers can influence the health of their offspring. Bin He and colleagues explored how paternal immune activation in mice affects a specific class of small RNAs in sperm, known as 28S-rsRNAs. Mice were injected with lipopolysaccharides derived from the bacteria Escherichia coli, to prompt an immune response. A week later, the mice were found to have fewer sperm and an increased number of 28S-rsRNAs in what sperm they did have. Notably, these effects largely subsided six weeks post-injection—spanning ...
Korea University study mimics heart mechanics in organoids using three-dimensional magnetic torque
2026-01-13
Heart disease remains the leading cause of death worldwide, yet progress in understanding and treating cardiac disorders is limited by the shortcomings of existing experimental models. Traditional animal models often fail to capture human-specific cardiac biology, while conventional two-dimensional cell cultures lack the functional and structural complexity of heart tissue. These challenges have fueled growing interest in regenerative medicine approaches that more accurately model human heart development, disease mechanisms, and therapeutic responses, with stem ...
Catching a radical in motion with µSR spectroscopy
2026-01-13
Using muon spin rotation spectroscopy, researchers from Japan and Canada successfully captured the rapid conversion of an imidoyl radical into a quinoxalinyl radical occurring within nanoseconds. The technique enabled real time detection of a highly reactive aromatic heterocyclic radical generated during the isocyanide insertion reaction, using muonium as a molecular tracker. The discovery is expected to advance particle-driven radical chemistry—exploring functional properties and offering new strategies for ...
Hanbat National University researchers reveal smart transparent woods that block UV and save energy
2026-01-13
Environmentally friendly buildings are highly attractive for sustainable development and efficient energy consumption. Recently, scientists have made significant strides towards the development of energy-efficient smart windows—with features such as optical modulation, high transparency, low thermal conductivity, and ultraviolet (UV) blocking and heat shielding capabilities—to replace traditional glass windows. The smart windows are a lucrative technology to protect household items as well as human health from the adverse effects of UV radiation.
In a recent breakthrough, a team of researchers from the Republic of Korea, led by Professor ...
Rhythm contains important information for the cell
2026-01-13
AMOLF researchers discovered a mysterious interplay of insulin signals in the worm C. elegans. The insulin-driven protein DAF-16 does not only move in and out of the cell nucleus in a complex rhythm, it does so at exactly the same moment in all cells of the body. Because of the many similarities between C. elegans and humans, the research may contribute to a better understanding of diseases such as diabetes, cancer and of ageing. The researchers published their findings in the journal Nature Communications on December 11.
Cells experience many different types of stress, such as starvation or ...
Nitrogen is key to faster regrowth in deforested areas, say researchers
2026-01-13
University of Leeds news
Embargoed: 13 January 2026 10:00 GMT
Images available here
Tropical forests can recover twice as quickly after deforestation if they have adequate soil nitrogen, according to new research published today.
A team of scientists led by the University of Leeds established the world’s largest and longest experiment to see how nutrients affect forest regrowth in areas cleared for activities such as logging and ...
Recovering tropical forests grow back nearly twice as fast with nitrogen
2026-01-13
Young tropical forests play a crucial role in slowing climate change. Growing trees absorb carbon dioxide from the air, using photosynthesis to build it into their roots, trunks, and branches, where they can store carbon for decades or even centuries. But, according to a new study, this CO2 absorption may be slowed down by the lack of a crucial element that trees need to grow: nitrogen.
Published in Nature Communications and coauthored by Cary Institute of Ecosystem Studies ecologist Sarah Batterman, the study estimates that ...
A new diet option for mild-to-moderate Crohn’s disease
2026-01-13
“What should I eat?” is perhaps the most common question patients with inflammatory bowel disease ask their doctors.
It’s notoriously difficult to answer. There have been few large studies of dietary interventions for IBD, a group of disorders that includes ulcerative colitis and Crohn’s disease.
Now, new research by Stanford Medicine investigators and their colleagues provides one potential answer. Their national, randomized controlled clinical trial found that a short-term, calorie-restrictive diet significantly improved both physical symptoms and biological indicators of mild-to-moderate Crohn’s ...
LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:
Tsinghua University team discovers skin's hidden role in amplifying immune responses, paving way for novel vaccine adjuvants
Jeonbuk National University researchers reveal safer way to manage chemical sewage sludge using pyrolysis
Activation of hypoxia signaling pathway enhances bone health and metabolism in obesity
Clinical consensus of ultrasound-derived fat fraction for assessment of liver steatosis
Trace levels of food pathogen do not always translate to health risk, says study
Engineered lipid nanoparticles reprogram immune metabolism for better mRNA vaccines
Democratic backsliding reaches Western democracies, with US decline “unprecedented”
Study maps how tuberculosis bacteria power themselves
'Unprecedented' wildfires in tropical peatlands during 20th century
University of Manchester scientists play key role in discovery of new heavy-proton particle at CERN
Blocking lipid production in healthy lung cells can reduce lung metastasis
Millions of protein complexes added to AlphaFold Database shed light on how proteins interact
Researchers show dinos hatched eggs less efficiently than modern birds
Neuroscientist from US-Mexico border dismantles science’s class problem from the inside
What flocking birds can teach AI
The scientist who warned that profit, not science, decides which drugs reach patients
A sea slug taught her how the brain works, and she never looked back
KIER cracks seawater electrolysis deposit problem with dual electrode system
Automated intervention shows significant increase in smoking cessation behavior
Top AI coding tools make mistakes one in four times
Hidden acid imbalance in kidney disease raises red flags
No evidence to suggest medicinal cannabis is effective for depression, anxiety or PTSD: research
The Lancet Global Health: Modelling suggests climate change could drive millions globally into physical inactivity by 2050 and be linked to an estimated half a million premature deaths
Fathers’ health crucial to improving pregnancy and child outcomes
Major step towards a first global system to track health before pregnancy
Climate action could prevent over 13 million premature deaths, but equity choices matter for global health
Bull sharks have ‘friends’
New research shows how to diagnose people with Alzheimer’s plus a hard-to-identify dementia type
Large craters offer clues to the origin of asteroid 16 Psyche
Researchers develop biochar-based photocatalyst that rapidly removes antibiotic pollutants from water
[Press-News.org] Board games boost young kids’ math skills, UO research review showsKids learn as they move game pieces along a numbered path