How To Teach Kids To Solve Sudoku Puzzles

How To To

 

Sudoku puzzles are an extremely enjoyable and fascinating past time. At first glance these puzzles may not appear to be appropriate for kids. Sudoku puzzles look complicated and appear to require advanced math skills. However, neither of these assumptions is true.

Sudoku puzzles are totally appropriate for kids of all ages. Kids find sudoku puzzles fun and rewarding and won’t even realize that by completing puzzles they are boosting their mental capacity, increasing their concentration span and developing basic math and logic skills. 

To ensure kids get the most rewarding experience with sudoku, it is important to ensure children are only doing age appropriate puzzles. Kids quickly become frustrated and give up when given puzzles to attempt that are too difficult. It is equally important to ensure that kids are given simple, easy-to-follow instructions on how to properly attack and solve sudoku puzzles.

Objective of Sudoku 

Every sudoku puzzle is different, but the object of all is the same. Although they may have varying sizes and levels of difficulty every puzzle can be solved in the same way, following the same rules.  

The objective of all sudoku puzzles is to fill in the blank squares with the correct numeral. Figuring out the correct numeral can be the tricky part. However, there is a method which can be used to easily discover the correct answer for any puzzle. 

Explain to children that to correctly solve a sudoku puzzle the following rules must be adhered to:

• Every row of the puzzle must contain the numerals 1 – 9 

• Every column of the puzzle must contain the numerals 1 – 9

• Every sub-section of the puzzle must contain the numerals 1 – 9 

(Although the rules above use the example of a 9 x 9 puzzle, they apply to puzzles of all sizes, eg. a 4 x 4 puzzles would require each row, column and sub-section to contain the numerals 1 – 4.)

Tips to Help Kids Solve Sudoku Puzzles

One of the easiest ways to help kids with solving sudoku puzzles is to ensure they use a pencil. Mistakes, which are often made (not just by kids, adults too!), are so much easier to correct if a pencil has been used.

The best way for kids to start solving a sudoku puzzle is to look for limited squares. Limited squares are empty spaces for which there is only one possible answer. A limited square will usually occur because it is the only one left blank in a row, column or sub-section. 

Spaces which have only two possibilities are also quite easy to solve, so suggest children also look for these.

If children become stuck, suggest they write all the possibilities (possible answers for one particular empty square) in each empty space. Having the possible answers visible in each space often allow kids to see the correct answer more easily.

Puzzles get easier and easier to solve as more spaces are filled in.

With just a little help and a push in the right direction kids will be flying through sudoku puzzles, in no time, all on their own. 

Most importantly, encourage children to have fun with sudoku! You may just find kids develop a healthy addiction, which may just last a life-time. 

Brooke Watson uses Sudoku puzzles with kids to help them develop problem

solving skills, logical thinking and creativity while they have fun. She has

created a collection of sudoku number puzzles and word puzzles for children at

www.kids-sudoku-puzzles.com




Article from articlesbase.com

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25 comments

  1. 19thHour says:

    Skynet can solve my newspaper puzzles any time. Just keep it away from the launch codes.

  2. mrcrazymonkeysb says:

    This is sooo awesome! Hopefully google will be able to make it faster…. Great job!

  3. senzasolventi says:

    they has removed “solve” button ((( solver is not working now!

  4. cparapat says:

    amazing…

  5. mattlkk says:

    @ShadowRaptor360 Wolfram|Alpha can.

  6. edytzuUndercover says:

    Sudoku is not a life problem.

  7. Hazyman says:

    原来是一个月前才推出的新服务,看来我当时还赶上了头班车了。这个功能挺有趣的,对数字有爱的人强势飘过。

  8. Hazyman says:

    @MediaUser better than nothing. 强帖留名。钦此。

  9. MediaUser says:

    Having mastered yet another useless task, Skynet is one step closer to world domination.

  10. crazykev07 says:

    @kevito111 Try the Android market. Duh

  11. RnathanF says:

    It would have been better if you challenged a fully-cloaked Eugene Varshavsky with your Google Goggles. McLeod’s already shown she can handle the likes of him.

  12. crazykev07 says:

    @ShadowRaptor360 Try it. Take a picture of the equation and see if it can solve it.

  13. crazykev07 says:

    @kevito111 Uh google goggles has been available for at least a year. I’ve had my android for a year and a half and I don’t remember not having it. If your wondering about the iPhone well then I don’t know, I don’t use inferior products.

  14. ShadowRaptor360 says:

    Great! When can it do my math homework?

  15. eakkang says:

    Good Job !!

  16. kevito111 says:

    Where can i download???????????????????

  17. aemerson82 says:

    Can you upload pics to google goggles? Or do I have to take a new pic every time?

  18. Breguenaaait says:

    @ZOMGITSCESAR2 Just tried it taking a photo from a puzzle in my monitor. Worked perfectly.

  19. zomggaylord says:

    Now will it blend?

  20. alien13579 says:

    it should be call Godgle

  21. unaghii says:

    Google, you cheating bastard!

  22. blabla12331 says:

    @ZOMGITSCESAR2 i just tried it with a random puzzle i found. solved it in a matter of seconds :)

  23. ZOMGITSCESAR2 says:

    I bet that you are going to have to buy that exact type of paper to use it

  24. Arvoitusmies says:

    the point in sudokus is to kill time….. so why would anyone need this?

  25. moster501 says:

    now come a google brain washer!!

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