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You can use any regular set of dice for these games, or you can use this on-line virtual dice roller from your computer! The nice thing about the virtual dice roller is that you can roll up to 60 dice at a time with ZERO noise!
Some game ideas:
Math Facts
Roll 2 dice and find the sum, difference, product, or quotient.
Challenge: Roll 3 dice and do the same as above.
Roll 2 dice and find the sum, difference, product, or quotient.
The picture above could be:
4 + 3 = 7
4 - 3 = 1
4 X 3 = 12
4 / 3 = 1 r. 1
Multi-Digit Addition and Subtraction
Roll 2 - 5 dice. Write down the number. Roll again and add or subtract the second number from the first number.
This could be:
6,345 + 5,321 = 11,666
or
6,345 - 5,321 = 1,024
Multi-Digit Multiplication
1. (2 digit X 1 digit)
2. (3 digit X 1 digit)
Roll 3 dice. Write down the number. Roll 1 dice. Find the product.
3. (2 digit X 2 digit)
Roll 2 dice. Write down the number. Roll the dice again. Find the product.
Long Division
Place Value
1. What is the place value of the ___?
Roll 2-6 dice depending on students level. Then ask them what is the place value of each #?
This would be 152,414.
So you could ask:
1. What is the place value of the 5? ten thousands
2. What value is the 2? 2,000
Challenge: You can increase the level by making the place values decimals.
2. Ten more, ten less
Roll 2 dice and have the students tell you what is the number that is ten less or ten more.
Roll 3 dice and have the students tell you what is the number that is one hundred less or one hundred more.
Roll 4 dice and have the students tell you what is the number that is one thousand less or one thousand more.
Rounding
Roll the dice and then round the number to the greatest place, hundreds place, tens place, etc.
This would be 6,511
rounded to the greatest place = 7,000
rounded to the hundreds place = 6,500
rounded to the tens place = 6,510
Geometry
Perimeter and area
1. Roll the dice. Write down the number. Roll the dice again. Use the two numbers to find the perimeter of a rectangle with those dimensions.
What would the area of that same rectangle be?
The perimeter would be 8 + 8 + 4 + 4 = 24
and the area would be 8 X 4 = 32
or to make it challenging,
What would the perimeter of a pentagon with that length be?
Shape identification
1. Roll one die. What would the shape with that number of sides be?
What other math skills could you use dice for? I would love to hear your ideas!
And.... before you go, head on over to my giveaway page to enter to win a Teachers pay Teachers gift card!