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Educational Games for Summer Learning Fun

Jun 25 | Educational Games for Summer Learning Fun

Looking for some fun summer fun?  Plan a weekly family game night.  Turn off the TV and gather everyone around the table for some game time.  Here are a few to get you started.

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Rat-a-Tat-Cat Children's card game that helps develop timing and basic mathematical concepts. It teaches strategy, memory building, and addition. Winner of the Oppenheim Toy Portfolio Platinum Best Toy Award; Mensa 1996 Best New Mind Game Award. Card game for two to six players age six and up .

Gobblet Gobblers Colorful kids' version of the popular new strategy game that's like tic-tac-toe. Game Includes wooden playing board, 12 colorful pieces and illustrated rules. For two players ages five and up.

Quiddler The SHORT Word Game. The challenge of Quiddler is to arrange your entire hand into words. For one to eight players ages eight to adult.

Word Pirates Award winning game for ages 6 and up. Each pirate takes a turn rolling letter dice and building a pathway of words. Players also use rock walls to block their enemies' path in an effort to be the first player to build a bridge across shark infested waters and reach the pirate loot.

Cover Your Tracks Four levels of play, beginner to expert. For ages eight years and up.

Axis & Allies Spring 1942 Control the fate of the world in this incredible game of military strategy, courage and cunning. For ages 12 and up. Choking hazard. Not for children younger than three.

Name Chase"Get a clue and figure out who!" Ages twelve and up.

Pick Two The always-changing, ever-rearranging crossword game. Players draw tiles, building their own personal crosswords as fast as they can. Ages eight and up.

The Scrambled States of America Players learn the names, capitals, nicknames, shapes and positions of the states through a myriad of visual teasers, language riddles and geography challenges. After playing, you'll see that there's more to the 50 States than meets the eye! Ages eight and up.

Ka-Ching!  One of the best two-player card games. It is super easy to learn, plays quickly and yet offers endless opportunities for strategic challenge. Emphasizes multiplication as a skill. Ages ten to adult.

Sort It Out Which animal's brain weighs more - a cat, a giraffe, a baboon, a kangaroo or a cow? In Sort It Out, you'll find out. Great family game, where guessing is half the fun. Ages twelve and up.

Qwirkle Tactile wooden block game combines the logic and strategy of Set® with the creative multi-maneuver game play of Scrabble®. Ages six and up.

Slam Scrabble  A high-speed four letter word game. Race against each other to change the existing word and get rid of your cards.  Ages eight and up.

Twisted Fish A new twist on an old favorite. Players compete to gather the most points possible by collecting as many 'Full Baskets' as they can. A Full Basket is complete set of the same 'Twisted Fish'. The twist comes in the form of 8 special 'Zinger' cards which allow the players to flout the rules, steal cards from other players, prevent other players from fishing, or go again out of order! Ages ten and up.

Ninety-Nine or Bust Cards can score points, subtract points, change directions or skip turns the object is to avoid going over 99 and busting. Twists, turns, strategy and a little Lady Luck make this a classic game of wits. Ages eight and up.

Yikerz  A game of magnet mayhem. Place your Yikerz pieces down on the board and try to avoid attracting the other pieces already played. The object is to get rid of all your pieces. If Yikerz collapse together, those pieces are yours to add to your stack. Ages fourteen and up.

The Settlers of Catan  Award-winning strategy game where players collect resources and use them to build roads, settlements and cities on their way to victory. The board itself is variable, making each game a little different from the next. Ages ten and up.

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Kim Ashby | Owner

Meet Kim Ashby | Owner

Kim Ashby earned a BS in Nursing from The Catholic University of America and, when she worked outside the home, was a Certified Emergency Nurse with a special interest in trauma nursing. She lives in Raleigh, NC with her husband and three sons. The Ashbys have home schooled their children since 1999. They graduated their oldest son in May 2007. He is attending UNC Wilmington. Kim continues to home school her younger boys. Her oldest son was diagnosed with ADHD when he was in the public school system in the second grade. Her second son has cerebral palsy which has resulted in multiple/global developmental delays. Her youngest son has undiagnosed, mild auditory processing issues.

Kim has co-instructed graduate level courses at UNC Chapel Hill for ST/OT students and Early Intervention students. She is the founder and President of the Board of Directors of GIFTSNC, Inc., a home schooling special needs support group. Kim has presented workshops at a variety of state home school conferences as well as local support group parent meetings and is often a guest speaker at homeschool conferences and is found on many guest speaker lists including Balancing the Sword. She is a Steering Committee member and former Treasurer for Dayspring Home Educators in Cary, NC. She served on the Board of Directors for the Family Support Network of Wake County. She holds a North Carolina Wildlife Permit for Small Mammal Rehabilitation and enjoys working with orphaned and injured wildlife.

"I have never let my schooling interfere with my education." Mark Twain