Smart Car is a puzzle game I have used a lot and love. Build the car in the picture using the four blocks. The finished model will always look the same, with two pieces sitting higher in the middle (see image above). The four pieces are all the same shape and made of solid wood and brightly painted. It has held up well. The wheels work and the car rolls.
- Look over the pieces before you begin. Talk about how one piece can look several different ways as you orient it differently.
- Work a puzzle to model the problem solving process. Talk out loud as you go, then take the puzzle apart and ask the individual to solve it.
- Turn to the answer page, which shows how to build one block at a time, if the puzzle is difficult (this view only for the first few puzzles). Then take the pieces out, turn back to the puzzle page, and have the individual try again.
- Turn a block to the correct orientation and place in the car if the individual gets stuck. Then take the piece out, turn it so it is not in the correct orientation, and give to the individual to reorient and place.
- Talk through the reasoning process if the individual gets stuck. Such as "the yellow block is taking up two spaces in the picture, so it must be lying on its side".
- Turn the block in two hands instead of flipping it around on the tabletop.
- Put the first block in the puzzle if the player can't figure out where to start.
- Place three of the blocks in the car and let the individual finish the puzzle by putting in the last block. Then start a puzzle and place two of the blocks and let the individual finish it. Work backward until the person is doing the puzzles alone.
- Give the individual one piece at a time, in the correct orientation, if they are having difficulty learning. After they improve, give them one piece at a time but not in the correct orientation. Finally let them choose their own pieces and orient them.
- Challenge the player by making sure none of the pieces on the table are in the correct orientation before beginning to build.
- Work from the finished view.
- Work on spatial relations, visualization, visual discrimination, visual closure, visual form constancy, coordinated use of both hands, manual dexterity, logic, problem solving, executive functioning skills, process skills, play and leisure exploration and participation



