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Questions Bring Families Closer, Reviewers Say Kids Talk “Outside-the-Box” With Family Dinner Box of Questions
![]() Gender: Boys and Girls Category: General Games MSRP: $19.95 TDmonthly rating: ![]() ![]() - What is your favorite time of the day? - Which teacher or coach had the most impact on you? - What kind of dessert would you eat for the rest of your life? - What have you done to protect the environment this week? - What was your favorite family vacation? A portion of the proceeds from this product is donated to The National Center on Addiction and Substance Abuse at Columbia University (CASA). ![]() Jenkins listed ensuing conversations as her favorite quality, noting that some required research to answer. Tong agreed that “the content was really what made this toy.” ![]() What the Kids Thought: Ethan (9) and Sara (7) “enjoyed discussing what to do with lottery winnings, the best jobs, and how to punish their parents’ bad behavior,” Dawson said. However, at one point, “Sara (7) sighed and asked, ‘Can’t we just talk the regular way?’” Jenkins observed that her children liked the questions and laughed a lot during play, and Tong noticed that playing “led to deeper conversations and good family memories” for Alyssa (9), Ethan (7) and Lexi (5). ![]() Cameron (7) and Reece (9) liked asking questions of the adults before responding themselves, and their favorite questions “dealt with rules or being in charge,” commented Jones, clearly amused. Reece (9), normally quiet during dinner conversation, took joy in acting as emcee for the game discussions. “[It] was a nice opportunity for him to lead the table conversation, for a change,” Jones said. ![]() Richardson commented, “There were some questions that [Alexander (8) and Jessica (6)] did not understand (‘personality trait,’ ‘prejudice’), but … it gave us a chance to talk about some new words and then apply them by answering the question.” She added that they also exercised their speaking skills as they took turns answering. ![]() Tong thought the price somewhat high compared to more complex board games. Dawson modified the wording on some of the cards to engage her children more: a great invention rather than the greatest invention. She also thought a few questions had a biased foundation. “‘Who do you think has it easier: boys or girls?’ suggests that one gender does indeed come with advantage,” she explained. Would You Want Another Toy Like This? “I will definitely be sharing this toy with friends and family — in fact, we have pulled it out on several occasions when other kids are over for dinner,” summed up Richardson. Roundtable participants were former corporate accountant Robbin Dawson with Ethan (9) and Sara (7); office assistant Charlene Jenkins with Taylor (16), Terence (13), Tabitha (11), Timothy (9), Tori (7) and Titus (5); stay-at-home mother Heather Jones with Reece (9), Cameron (7) and Meg (5); World Bank policy advisor Gail Richardson with Alexander (8) and Jessica (6); and stay-at-home mother Mildred Tong with Alyssa (10), Ethan (7), Lexi (5) and Erik (18 months). ![]() |
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