We hope you have fun with this one! It’s super simple, but it will give your child lots of basic facts practice. When you have 15 cards (or stacks of cards) in a row, you win! (Play 10 in a row if you need a shorter version.) When you have a card that has the same answer as another card you’ve already played, set it on top.Ħ. For example, “4+2” would be right before “3+4.”ĥ. You will be building a row of cards, and they must be in numerical order by their answer.
Take turns drawing a card, naming the answer, and placing it in front of you.Ĥ. Flash cards are very inexpensive you can purchase through these links if you’d like:ģ. You are welcome to print mine for free, but it may be cheaper to actually buy them when you consider the cost of computer ink. Not how I want to spend our precious evenings!ġ. And if we’re going to be talking to each other, I can’t bear it if it’s me holding up flash cards. She can either play a computer game or do the traditional flash card drill.Īfter a long day at school, she needs to be interacting with me and her siblings… not sitting in front of a screen.
Just grab a set of addition, subtraction, multiplication, or division flash cards… and you’re good to go!Īre you looking for a simple game to review math facts? My daughter is in second grade, and she is supposed to be practicing her addition facts a few times a week. Today I’m sharing a simple math facts game using flashcards.