Puzzles for fun! (via Teacher Joyce’s Weblog)

Puzzles are great for those times when kids are finished with the assignment, and need to wait for the rest of the class. They're also good ways for kids to learn vocabulary, and pay attention to spellings. My students are really fond of wordsearches and crosswords. Discovery Education's Puzzlemaker is good for making a few different kinds puzzles. ArmoredPenguin.com lets you save and print puzzles as PDF files (though my crossword puzzle apparen … Read More

via Teacher Joyce's Weblog

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Free printable word search puzzles for adults! (via Free Printable word search puzzles for adults)

free printable word search puzzles for adults are now available. free printable word search puzzles for adults is a way to enhance your mind. So go right ahead and get your free printable word search puzzles for adults. below you will find the best and most trusted places online to download your free printable word search puzzles for adults. Thanks. … Read More

via Free Printable word search puzzles for adults

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Puzzles are good source of learning for your kids (via Toy for Kids)

The child learning process continuous as it grows. Mostly the learning process can get in the interaction in the surrounding and in the society through playing in the other children. But we can also teach our child to the learning process by giving the right toys for them. Your child can take a lot of advantages from creative and puzzle toys in different ways. Using these puzzle toys you can easily teach your child some basic things. Playing with … Read More

via Toy for Kids

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Love Crossword Puzzles (via My Blog about Books)

Love Crossword Puzzles Puzzle Books On Amazon I've found many websites that have free crossword puzzle printouts which i can fit into my purse for handy access. Great for waiting for the kids , Dr's office or just plain killing time! Here are some websites that have free printable puzzles: http://www.crosswordtournament.com/links/index.htm http://www.mycrosswordsite.com/MyCrosswordSiteMain.htm http://www.puzzleplanet.com http://www.crossword-puzzles.co.uk/ http://www.nRead More

via My Blog about Books

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Puzzles (via XenoArgento)

Solving puzzles is a delight. Recently I got a book on puzzles. The book is actually a collection of Scientific American's mathematical games column. Some very interesting puzzles there are. The book is 'My Best Mathematical and Logic Puzzles' by Martin Gardner. It's a new book, which re-invigorated my thirst of puzzles. A few years ago someone once told me to find a solution and then, prove your solution is the best on. I burned my brain a lot, … Read More

via XenoArgento

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Hooked on puzzles? (via Niespor Robert)

Most of us have heard of it before. Puzzle games and brain teasers that excersise your mind. Those puzzlers help your brain with memory and concentration. Article on benefits of puzzles. A popular puzzle game. Should all people be obligated to excerise their minds using these puzzle games? Are there different games for different age groups? For example, older people tend to work at crossword puzzles. … Read More

via Niespor Robert

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New Puzzles help Calm Alzheimer’s Patients (via ElderCaring)

 Kansas City's Springbok Puzzles knows how to make a good jigsaw puzzle. They ought to; they're one of the oldest puzzle brands in the country. But two years ago, they got a phone call that would add a new dimension to their business.  "A 12-year-old contacted me from the Boston area and he asked if I wouldn't give him some puzzles for his 13th birthday," Steve Pack, President of Springbok Puzzles, said. But Max Wallack didn't want the puzzles fo … Read More

via ElderCaring

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Is solving puzzles like Sudoku, MEJJI, Crossword or Jigsaw similar to studying Mathematics? Part I

…A thought provoking question that popped into my mind one day while solving a MEJJI puzzle.

Why do we bother studying mathematical courses in school? Is it just to pass the exams, or is there more to it. Afterall, when you graduate, you don’t find people shouting questions at you on the streets or at work, “by the way, what’s 2x+y, if x is 3 and y is 5?”. That would be indeed, a most bizarre thing to ask anyone anywhere outside a classroom – a mathematics class-room.

So, if you are like me and studied the sciences. Surely, you must feel that you’ve spent several years, learning unuseful mathematical concepts that are never to be used again in the real world. Better still, if you were really good at maths, you might indeed want people to shout at you, “by the way, what’s 2x + y…”, so you can show-off your mathematical abilities. But, no. Once, you’ve left college, that opportunity just never seems to come by anymore.

Ok, so, may be you need to step back a bit and understand why all those mathematical concepts were being taught to you in the first place. Surely, your lecturers must have recognised that you would not need to answer mathematical questions anymore after leaving college. Or,… may be not, as they themselves have continued to answer mathematical questions even after leaving college (as lecturers). Hence, may be someone needs to tell them those maths problems will be useless to you in the real world.

Let me step back a bit, before getting carried away. Besides, if you are a graduate, you already see where I’m going and have most probably thought of these points before and have your own personal conclusions.

My personal conclusion, regardless of usefulness of subject outside college walls is,… Colleges fundamentally try to teach the art of learning using all the different subjects as a tool: maths, physics, chemistry, business, geography, etc. The exams are a way to check cognitive ability – how well you have learnt to learn. And the certificate represents how good a learner you have been. That’s all!

So, one can think of the whole schooling process as brain development, using different “tools”. This is why, after leaving college, we may tend to lose the brain workout we got while at school. Depending on the job you end up doing, the built-up brain muscles may begin to relax and you may begin to feel you are not as sharp as you were at college. Well, yes you are not, if you have not been exercising your brain. Also, no one is testing you now, so you may not really have a reason to be as sharp.

For me, this is where I feel solving puzzles comes into the picture. The more I think about this point, the more I see that all these learning tools are fundamentally,… wait for it,… “puzzles”. However, as they are not ‘fun’ enough to be called puzzles, they have been somewhat relegated to the four corners of college walls. And in some cases lecturers have tried to use the word “quiz” to soften the rigour!

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Why Puzzles?

It is a widely accepted fact that Puzzles and other such brain teasers like Sudoku, Crosswords and MEJJI are a fun and exciting way to spend free time. I picked up the following sentence from the site: http://www.howtodothings.com/hobbies/c543-puzzles–brain-teasers.htmlp

It says, “Puzzles and brain teasers provide healthy and invigorating mental challenges.” The word ‘healthy’ here immediately connotes some sort of biological contribution to brain wellness and activity – almost like some disguised brain-food. The mind boggles…

Why would a seemingly harmless set of, what is fundamentally, numbers, letters, and lines in your daily newspapers (or books) provide elements of ‘health’ to your brain? hmmm…

Could puzzles really be ‘brain-food’ in disguise? Why haven’t doctors simply come out with it? For instance, newsflash – “Solving puzzles will greatly improve your vitamin B12 levels” – or something… and rank puzzle solving amongst the cadres of omega-3 fatty acids – found in oily fish – and crucial to the health of our nervous system. Without which, memory loss may result. Something tells me, solving puzzles should be added to this BBC article: http://www.bbcgoodfood.com/content/wellbeing/features/boost-brainpower/1/

Before I progress, I must add a biased opinion, namely… I love puzzles. Hence, be warned that whatever the outcome of this blogpost, like all true scientists would, I will be aiming to paint puzzles in a good light and make you a puzzle convert.

At this point I will search out and reblog the interesting things people are saying about puzzles to attach as comments to this post, and hopefully try and draw a conclusion on the question, “why puzzles?” Here we go…

Posted in Crosswords, Jigsaw, MEJJI, Puzzle, Puzzles, Sudoku | Tagged , , , , | Leave a comment