This is a purchased game that my grandchild LOVE! At the end I will show you how you can make your own games for any skill you need.
Diana is using the special pen to select the correct response to the time at the top of the card.
If the correct answer is selected the pen turns on a green light. It also plays music or says an encouraging phrase for the child.
If a wrong response is chosen, the light on the pen is red. The pen also makes a beeping sound and tells the child to try again.
The purchased games come in nice recipe-sized boxes. They have them for several different math and phonics skills. We have clocks, money, addition, subtraction, multiplication, division, beginning letter sounds.
But what really makes Hot Dots versatile is the extra dots you can buy. There are two sheets of COLD dots (wrong answer) and one sheet of HOT dots (right answer) in each package. The pens can also be purchased separately. I have made lots of other games for the grandchildren using these dots.
I don't often promote purchased games....but we really like these. ...and the skill possibilities are endless!
Search games are always enjoyed by even little ones. The games are easy to make more difficult for older children by simply having more pairs to match.
I used two different colors of card stock. Using two different colors makes the game a little easier for younger children as all the clocks are on yellow while the times are on blue.
The clocks were made using a stamp. They could be made using pictures from a math workbook. I marked out a 8 1/2" X 11" sheet of card stock. Then after the clocks were stamped and marked I covered the sheets with clear Contact paper to make the cards more durable. The times were written on the blue card stock cards after a sheet was marked out and then covered with Contact paper.
NOTE: I have blank cards printed on numerous colors of card stock in different sizes so they are ready whenever I need them. Those of you who are more computer sauvy can probably have templates ready and add pictures or words before printing them out.
To Play: In turn, players turn up two cards attempting to find a match. If the turned cards are not a match, the cards are again placed face-down and the next player takes a turn.
The dominoes were made of posterboard to be extra sturdy. Posterboard comes in very pretty colors.
I drew out the dominoes on a full sheet of posterboard. The clock pictures were cut from a math workbook.
TO PLAY: I give the child one domino to start the play. They find the needed dominoes to complete "the snake."
Sometimes we play it more of a GAME by playing a bit more like dominoes. We each draw five cards and one card is placed in the center. In turn, we play one of our dominoes or draw one if we have none that play and the turn passes to the next player. The first player to play all their dominoes wins....OR we usually just draw a couple more dominoes and keep playing until all have been played.
These pieces were part of a book of math games and activities that I purchased. However, it would be very easy to make these same pieces at home using pictures of clocks from math workbooks.
The children PLAY with these rather than do pages of workbook drill. I set out the card pairs I want them to drill for the day and they match them up. They often ask for more cards to do after I have checked their matches....how often do you get that with workbooks????
TIP: These could easily be made self-correcting by simply putting matching letters on the back of pairs.