My dad could be fiercely competitive when he played games with other adults. But when he played with children, the challenge for him changed from winning to figuring out the best way to teach the game. I learned a lot from Dad's example.
He was a genius at modifying games to help us learn how to play well at each child’s level of development and ability. We used to have back yard touch football games that included everybody in the neighborhood who wanted to play, from my teen-age brother and his friends to my 3-year-old brother Lee.
Creative rule modifying can keep the game a challenge for all player skill levels
Normally teens would be expected to refuse to play touch football with a baby on their side, but Dad changed their attitude. He invented a handicap rule: Any time Lee’s team managed to get the ball into his hands, Lee got an automatic touchdown.
Dad’s new rule transformed Lee from a team nuisance to a team asset and it motivated his team to encourage him. As his skills improved, Dad kept on adjusting the rules to keep the game a challenge for him and fun for everyone else, too.
Games provide a wealth of opportunity for children to develop essential learning skills.
For example, Uno, Old Maid, and other card games teach preschoolers matching. Monopoly provides incentive and practice for school age children to figure out basic math problems. Authors and Clue help children learn to reason and deduct. Outdoor sports like softball and soccer help children develop motor skills and hand-eye coordination.
Parents and older siblings can encourage younger children to play games well with a few simple strategies:
Introduce rules and strategies with practice games.
Play with the cards face up all the time with preschoolers, explaining and helping them make decisions as you play. With children who are a little older, play a game or two with the cards face up, explaining as you play and then graduate to face down cards.
Avoid intense competition.
For young children, competition can be “too fierce and emotionally distressing to be enjoyable,” said Lincoln Stein, author of Family Games. “If you shout, ‘Hooray! We’ve used up all the cards,’ instead of, ‘Tough luck, you lose,’ 3-year-olds will be delighted,” he said. “Keeping early play relatively pointless will avoid both the bitter repercussions of letting children win on purpose and the violent feelings that emerge when a family plays too competitively.”
Simplify.
Choose the simplest games for preschoolers, Stein suggested, and doctor the deck of cards, leaving only the Aces, 2’s, 3’s, 4’s and 5’s. “Add cards when children are able to recognize names and numbers, to hold more cards in their hands, or their increased skill calls for more complicated games.”
Stein also suggested that instead of shuffling the cards, children can lay them all on the floor face down and pick them back up in random order. If children can’t hold all the cards in their hands, he said, use fewer cards. Or place a pillow in front of a child and lean the cards against it. Another solution is let children hold the cards as a deck and look through it card by card.
Invent handicap rules.
Modify the game the way my dad did with our neighborhood touch foodball games.
Turn a competitive game into a cooperative game.
Let younger children play with parents or older siblings as cooperative partners. A preschooler can sit on someone’s lap during a game of Uno, for example, and help choose which cards to play.
When families play games flexibly this way, they can accommodate not only the younger children, but also other family members with special needs. My father-in-law developed Alzheimer’s Disease. As he became more confused and disoriented, he could no longer play complex games like Scrabble or Monopoly with his grandchildren. But for a long time, he could still play Uno. And he needed to be included.
In our family, it was OK for one of the kids to look at Grandpa’s hand and gently tell him which card to play next if he got confused. That way we made it possible for Grandpa to stay in the game as long as possible—the game of Uno, and the game of life.
© 2020 Becky Cerling Powers – Reprint with attribution only (www.beckypowers.com)
This blog is excerpted from excerpted from Sticky Fingers, Sticky Minds: quick reads for helping kids thrive
Becky Cerling Powers is the author of Laura’s Children: the hidden story of a Chinese orphanage and Sticky Fingers, Sticky Minds: quick reads for helping kids thrive
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