Logic Puzzles for Teachers
Bring the fun of logic puzzles for kids into your classroom with printable and digital challenges created especially for the primary classroom by the Teach Starter team of teachers.
Including riddles, sudoku puzzles, codebreakers and mini mysteries that students can complete as individual tasks or a whole-class challenge, this collection of logic puzzles will help your students hone their problem-solving skills, develop critical thinking and build their logical reasoning abilities — all while having fun!
Each curriculum-aligned teaching resource has undergone a thorough review by an expert teacher on our teaching team, so you know it's ready for your classroom and your lesson plans!
Looking for fresh ways to use logic puzzles in the classroom? Read on for a primer from our teacher team.
What Is a Logic Puzzle? A Kid-Friendly Definition
If you're introducing this fun teaching tool to the classroom, how do you explain it to your students? Try this kid-friendly definition from our teacher team!
A logic puzzle is a fun challenge that makes you think. It's like a game that requires you to solve a problem by figuring out clues and using your logical thinking skills.
The puzzle will give you some information, like hints or rules. You get to use that information to solve the puzzle and find the answer!
Logic puzzles give us a chance to be detectives! We can put all the puzzle pieces together to solve a mystery while we practise our thinking skills.
Types of Logic Puzzles
Curious about the different types of logic puzzles that are perfect for engaging kids in the classroom? Let's dive in!
Sudoku
Sudoku is a challenging number-based grid puzzle that dates back to the 18th century! To complete this puzzle type, students are given clues and have to fill in missing numbers.
Each puzzle consists of a 9x9 grid divided into nine 3x3 boxes. Some of the squares are pre-filled with numbers, and the goal is to fill in the remaining empty squares with numbers from 1 to 9. Sudoku is based on a rule that no number can be repeated within a row, column or small square.
Riddles
Riddles are fun puzzles that require kids to decipher clues and make logical deductions to arrive at a solution.
Often based on wordplay, riddles help kids build their lateral thinking abilities and require kids to make connections between different pieces of information. With ambiguous or deceptive language, these puzzles help build students reading comprehension skills as they have to make logical inferences and read between the lines to uncover the underlying meaning and solve the puzzle.
Codebreaker Puzzles
Codebreaker puzzles allow kids to play spy as they use logic to decode secret messages or break a hidden code using logical reasoning and deduction.
Students are presented with a coded message — often using symbols, numbers, or a substitution cipher (where each symbol represents a different letter or word). The task is to then decipher the code by analysing patterns, making logical connections and using deductive reasoning to match symbols with their corresponding letters or words.
Pattern Puzzles
Puzzles that involve recognising and continuing a pattern or sequence of shapes, numbers or objects are a great example of a logic puzzle that helps kids develop a host of skills from pattern recognition to logical inferencing to abstract thinking.
Because these puzzles challenge kids to identify the underlying pattern or rule governing a set of elements and then use that knowledge to predict or complete the next element in the series, they're a great tool for challenging students to make connections.
Are Logic Puzzles Good for Your Brain?
Your students may have heard their parents or grandparents talking about doing logic puzzles to keep their brains sharp and ask you if these puzzles are really good for the brain.
The answer is, well, complicated. There aren't conclusive studies specific to logic puzzles that say they're going to help our students' brains (or adult brains for that matter). Still, there are benefits to doing puzzles overall that are worth considering:
- Research has found that completing puzzles causes the body to release dopamine, a neurotransmitter that helps regulate our moods and is also linked to our memory and concentration.
- Researchers have also found that the cognitive stimulation of working on a puzzle reinforces connections between our brain cells.
- Puzzles work both sides of our brain — the left side, which controls logical thinking, and the right side, which controls creativity.
- Some researchers say that doing daily puzzles can actually increase your IQ score.
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Christmas Mini-Mystery - Who Broke the Candy Cane?
Add a fun, logic-based Christmas-themed activity to your plans. Students read clues to solve a holiday mystery.
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Christmas Mini-Mystery - Whose Present Is the One with Plain Brown Paper?
Read clues to solve a mystery with this fun, logic-based Christmas-themed activity.
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Secret Code Number Line - Worksheet
Crack the number line code with five number line codebreaker worksheets to practice number identification, addition, and subtraction.
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Classroom Icebreaker Game – Who Hacked Pixel Jump 5000?
A retro-style mystery game where students combine individual clues to reveal the solution.
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Mini-Mystery – Which Key Opens the Door?
Use knowledge of 2-D shapes and right angles to solve the mystery in this fun, logic-based activity.
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Decimals on Number Lines – Codebreaker Worksheets
Crack the number line code with worksheets practising identification, addition, and subtraction of decimal numbers.
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Mini-Mystery – Who Won the Race?
A fun, logic-based activity where students read clues to solve the mystery.
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Mini-Mysteries – Interactive PowerPoint
A set of interactive, logic-based activities where students read clues to solve each mystery.
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Christmas Mini-Mystery - Who Put Up Their Christmas Tree Too Early?
Read clues to solve a mystery with this fun, logic-based Christmas-themed activity.
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Tacky Jumper Problem Solving & Observation Activity
Build visual discrimination skills and focus on attention to detail with an Ugly Christmas jumper Problem-Solving Activity.
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Halloween Mini-Mystery – Who Scared the Black Cat? – Interactive PowerPoint
Download a Halloween brain game for kids with interactive elements that challenge your students to use logic to solve a spooky mystery!
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Mystery Pattern Grids (Multiplication)
Students solve multiplication facts, interpret grid coordinates and draw shapes to reveal a mystery picture.
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Mini-Mystery – Who Stole the Cookie? – Interactive PowerPoint
An engaging, process of elimination activity where students read clues to solve the mystery.
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Mini-Mystery – Who Owns the Dog? – Interactive PowerPoint
A fun, logic-based activity where students read clues to solve the mystery.
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Mini-Mystery – Who Broke the Window? – Interactive PowerPoint
Engage your learners in some friendly problems solving with an interactive mini-mystery that is sure to be a SMASH!
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Rounding Whole Numbers – Riddle Worksheets
Integrate riddles and maths with this set of rounding worksheets.
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Halloween Themed Division Riddles - Worksheet
Have a bit of division fun with our riddle-based Halloween sheets!
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Mystery Pattern Grids (Addition)
Solve addition sums and interpret grid coordinates to reveal the picture.
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Mini-Mystery – Who Stole the Cookie?
A fun, logic-based activity where students read clues to solve the mystery.
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Mini-Mystery – Who Owns the Dog?
A fun, logic-based activity where students read clues to solve the mystery.
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Mini-Mystery – Who Broke the Window?
A fun, logic-based activity where students read clues to solve the mystery.
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Mini-Mystery – What Is the Shoe's Name?
A fun, logic-based activity where students read clues to solve the mystery.
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Mini-Mystery – Who Killed the Class Plant?
A fun, logic-based activity where students read clues to solve the mystery.
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Mini-Mystery – Who Is Lying?
A fun, logic-based activity where students read clues to solve the mystery.
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Mini-Mystery – Who Pushed Humpty Dumpty?
A fun, logic-based activity where students read clues to solve the mystery.
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Mini-Mystery – Who Drank the Teacher's Coffee?
A fun, logic-based activity where students read clues to solve the mystery.
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Mini-Mystery – Who Scared the Black Cat?
A logic-based Halloween-themed puzzle where students solve a mystery by reading clues.
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Easter Mini-Mystery – Who Stole the Easter Egg?
A fun, logic-based Easter-themed activity where students read clues to solve the mystery.
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Mini-Mystery – What Is the Shoe's Name? – Interactive PowerPoint
An engaging warm-up activity about a shoe with a mysterious name.
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Mini-Mystery – Who Killed the Class Plant? – Interactive PowerPoint
An intriguing mystery where students use their problem-solving skills to determine the culprit.
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Top and Tail Puzzles
10 top and tail puzzles to use when working with vocabulary.