Children love to play games, from hopscotch to Go Fish. Games are fun, engaging activities—and early childhood educators can utilize children’s love of games to help them learn.
Games are a type of play, and we know from research that young children learn through play. Meaningful play experiences help children develop cognitive and social skills and help children practice skills for executive functioning (Mardell, et al., 2016).
Playful learning happens along a spectrum from free or self-directed play to guided play, to games. Game-play learning experiences in the early childhood classroom are adult-initiated, child-directed, and centered around a learning goal (Zosh et al., 2018; Zosh et al, 2022).
To incorporate games into your early childhood classroom it is first helpful to first have a deeper understanding of game-based learning.
Game-based learning is the process of designing learning experiences using gaming principles to make learning fun and engaging. Quality game-based learning experiences:
Game-based learning uses concepts like motivation, player engagement, adaptivity, and graceful failure to help children learn in an engaging and interesting way.
Game-based learning is not just a fun, engaging experience. It also helps children practice important, developmentally appropriate skills. Game-based learning can provide young children with the opportunities to:
So, how do you get started? There are four simple steps you can follow to begin incorporating game-based learning into your classroom.
Want to learn more about game-based learning? Watch our full webinar on Game-Based Learning in the Early Childhood Classroom.