Using Games to Learn: the Importance of Games in Your Classroom


Using Games to Learn: the Importance of Games in Your Classroom


Using Games in the Classroom


Do you use games in your classroom?

I mean, like ALL. THE. GAMES?


- card games 

- board games 
- whole-class games 
- partner games 
- individual games 
- small-group games

Do you incorporate games into ALL subjects?


If your answer is no, you are missing out on a virtual GOLD MINE of learning in your classroom!


Quote from Mr. Rogers, "Play is often talked about as if it were a relief from serious learning. But for children, play is serious learning."


Today, I’d like to talk about the importance of incorporating more games into your classroom routine.


Games are a great way to introduce a concept, practice and reinforce skills, review before a test, build confidence, and so many more benefits.



Using games instead of workbooks, homework, or drill and kill is a FUN way to incorporate learning in a nonthreatening way.  It feels rebellious and like you are "cheating" and not fully teaching, but that couldn't be further from the truth! 
Those of you who know me know that my philosophy in both a traditional brick and mortar school setting as well as in homeschooling involves learning through play.
If this is not your mindset, it is never too late to change and begin thinking of play and games as part of your curriculum.  
Games ARE learning!
Diane Ackerman quote, "Play is the brain's way of learning."

In addition to learning and practicing specific skills and concepts, playing games develops and encompasses many other skills:
  • verbal skills
  • following directions
  • social skills
  • cooperation
  • critical thinking
  • problem-solving
  • focus

Your students will be THRILLED to come to your classroom when you put away the workbooks and worksheets and play a game instead.
You will be THRILLED because your load will become lighter by adding games to your day and week.  The benefits for you include:
  • less prep time (ALWAYS a win-win!)
  • nothing to grade
  • minimal setup
  • maximum engagement 
  • informal observations and assessments
Play gives children the opportunity to practice what they are learning" Mr. Rogers.

There are many different ways you can add games to your day.
  • Add a game to your morning routine for "bell work".
  • Add games for early finishers.
  • Add games to centers.
  • BEGIN with a game in any subject.
  • Complete other work and END with a game.
  • End your day on a high note with a game.
  • Add games for enrichment or remediation.

One of the easiest and most fun ways I used games in my classroom for a whole group was so very simple and involved absolutely NO PREP on my part. I call this game "Four Corners".  Here's how to play:
Designate each corner of your classroom as a letter.  You can even add the letters like I did.  One corner is A, another is B, and the other two are C and D.  Ask your students a question with four answers.  When you say "move", the students all move to the corner that they feel is the correct answer.
(When you first begin playing this game, students do not want to be "wrong" and will usually follow the students they think know the answer.  One way to stop this is to give each student a write/wipe board along with a dry-erase marker and eraser.  Before saying "move", the students must write their answers on their boards.  When they move, they take only their boards with them and hold those boards up so that you can see that they have written the same letter as where they are standing.)

As students become more confident with this game, they will be able to move to a letter with confidence, even if they are the only student.  It really becomes empowering when students realize that the majority of students actually move to the wrong answers sometimes!



You can discover more about a child in an hour of play than in a year of standardized tests!"- Herding Kats in Kindergarten


Through many, MANY years of teaching, I have witnessed the power of using games in my classroom (and now in our homeschool).  While it does take a little planning and gathering of materials on your part, it is still vastly less than printing worksheets, grading those worksheets, and more.  Use those worksheets sparingly as a way to have paper proof (if you must) that the students have learned the concept.  We all know that you know which students have it and which students don't without seeing it on that piece of paper!

You can add games to your classroom without a lot of money:

  • thrift stores
  • by asking family members and friends
  • posts on social media for donations to your classroom
  • yard sales
  • clearance
  • online printables
  • online digital games

If you are interested, I have several printable games in my Teachers pay Teachers store.

Here is a FREE printable in my store.


Sign up for my weekly emails, and get eleven FREE no-prep centers and games.


Giving your students time to learn in this format can and will transform your classroom environment and your students' confidence in their abilities. 

Using Games in the Classroom


Try it and watch the magic happen.


Fun combined with learning, that's just...
My Kind of Teaching


6 comments:

  1. Wow, I learned so much about games! Thanks!

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  2. Thank you so very much for stopping by and reading. I hope you gained some new ideas for using games in your own classroom.

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  3. I LOVE using games in my classroom! You are so right that for children, games ARE serious learning!
    I've used "fun" games (Life, Monopoly, Clue, etc) in my classroom as well as "educational" games (I have one called Made for Trade that takes please in colonial America, that my middle school students loved!). "Fun" games help students practice taking turns, listening, communicating appropriately, fine motor skills, and gives them a knowledge base of games that comes in handy when a test references a board game. "Educational" games give them all this AND reinforce concepts or let them explore new concepts in a non-threatening way.

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  4. Thanks for reminding me about the importance of games. I love using games for problem solving and building community.

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  5. Great blog post! I love playing games in my classroom, such a simple way to for kids to have fun while learning.

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  6. I love the idea for multiple choice answers - so simple but adds movement and a game type feel to it! Trying to think of ways to incorporate free response to the corners idea...

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