Chinese game for kid




















We love Post-It Notes, and you can also turn it into a Chinese tic-tac-toe game! If you have a driveway or patio, write out the words your kids are writing and have them jump or spray water on it!

Here are 12 fun ways to play and learn Chinese with sidewalk chalk! Do you you have a backyard or live near a field? Try Chinese sight word soccer! Inspired by a brilliant mom, Cathy, we made spinning radical wheels with cardboard toilet paper rolls!

For extra spaced repetition reading practice, I have written sentences for my kids to review Chinese characters in different contexts. Cut the sentences into strips so they can focus on one sentence at a time and not get overwhelmed by a full page of words!

Since many parents have Legos, Duplo, and Megablocks at home, you can quickly repurpose them into word matching activities! If your kids are into building with blocks, Legos, or Magnetic tiles, use those to create Chinese words! In 5 minutes, he made a golf club with cardboard tubes while I quickly cut out mountains from green paper! Here are 7 fun ways to teach Chinese characters with play dough! Kids love seeing words magically appear after painting over wax or white crayon and how the paint literally rolls away from the wax!

Tips for wax resist painting are explained in this post! In many schoolyards, it is played without a net, with rules similar to hacky sack. The goal of the game is to avoid letting the ball touch the ground. Along with ping pong, the Chinese have also dominated the badminton sport at all major world competitions. Many of our Chinese tutors played these little games while growing up!

What games did you play? Have you tried playing any of these? Founded in , TutorGroup, the parent company of TutorMing, created the first commercially available synchronous learning portal in the world. TutorGroup offers TutorMing for Chinese learning. Sara Lynn Hua is a contributing writer and editor for TutorMing. TutorMing Blog. Let us know in the comments!

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TutorMing News. Back to Top. But many of them give us an interesting insight into another culture and are an excellent way of extending your studies on China. This traditional Chinese chase game can cause much screeching and excitement! Play outdoors - or indoors, if you have a large room. It is also known simply as "Cat and Mouse". This traditional Chinese game is great fun for the playground. You will need a large group of children - at least 10, but the more the merrier!

The kids can be any age. Originally played with small inch-square rice bags, this traditional Chinese game is similar to Jacks and Knucklebones and can be played with either, or even a collection of pebbles, if you don't want to make your own "pieces".

Chess is an excellent game for kids. It teaches them strategic thinking, logic and it's fun, too! We have the rules of Chess, here, written so that children can understand them. Read online or download a printable version. This traditional Chinese playground game develops children's ball skills and their concentration - it really keeps them on their toes!

It is probably best for children aged 6 or older and can be played indoors or outdoors. When I was young, growing up in Hong Kong, the sight and sound of Chinese fortune sticks like these being used at temples was very familiar and exciting to me.

Bundles of these sticks were placed in jars and gently shaken until a few sticks stuck out above the rest, or fell out. This is a simple guessing game for which you just need two kids!



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