Parents Realize Games Can Teach

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Greg Tito

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Sep 29, 2005
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Parents Realize Games Can Teach



Looks like these "murder simulators" might be good for something.

Parents might be inundated with calls against videogames from politicians and the mainstream media, and how they can infect children with murderous thoughts. At least in Australia and New Zealand, the majority of parents understand that games can be used for good much easier than they can be forces for evil. That's what the results of a study commissioned by Interactive Games & Entertainment Association (iGEA) and conducted by Bond University on the Gold Coast of Eastern Australia reported in the latest issue of "Gaming Parents" magazine.

Note: "Gaming Parents" magazine doesn't exist, but I would totally have a subscription if it did.

The study said that 92 percent of the parents surveyed believed games are educational. In fact, games are so educational that 75 percent said they actually use games to teach their kids life lessons. Parents said games helped teach an extremely wide range of topics including - but not limited to - technology, maths, science, planning, language, work, life and society in general.

"Not only do I see literacy and vocabulary improving, my students are far more engaged when we are using games," said Edwin McRae, a teacher who struggles to instruct 13-year-olds in using correct English. "I have seen students gain a much deeper understanding of the topic they are studying as games usually encourage them to repeat exercises numerous times in order to be rewarded, earn more points or progress to further levels. This reinforces that knowledge so much more as they repeat the skills, rather than just reading it in a book once."

This is heavy praise for games coming from the people on the front lines of education. Yes, the study was commissioned by iGEA who have a vested interest in making educational games, and who see the value of them in classrooms and in the home. They will undoubtably be biased in their appraisal of games as an educational tool.

Still, if I had to pick a side I'd trust, the people actually working to teach kids probably know what's up more than Keith Vaz [http://www.escapistmagazine.com/news/tag/michael+atkinson].

Source: iGEA.net [http://www.igea.net/2012/04/hands-up-it%E2%80%99s-game-on-in-the-classroom/]

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Dastardly

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Apr 19, 2010
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Greg Tito said:
Parents Realize Games Can Teach
What we're talking about here is just educational flash cards. It's really nothing new, it's just a more convenient version of what we've used forever and a day. It drills basic knowledge by, as the quotes mention, encouraging kids to repeat exercises over and over to gain mastery.

It's useful, don't get me wrong... it's just not new or groundbreaking.

I'm more concerned about the long-term impact this kind of stuff has. Plenty of research indicates that we are already overusing reward systems, and it is doing a lot to destroy motivation. In fact, a study in 2007 showed that rewards have a tendency to lower achievement over time.

The supporting evidence generally comes from the short-term view... but, as with pharmaceuticals, the long-term side effects are extremely important to learn before we start throwing it at everyone.
 

robert022614

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Dec 1, 2009
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I love games,but did anyone else laugh I little when they noticed this article right above the DOA boob one?
 

Grahav

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Mar 13, 2009
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robert022614 said:
I love games,but did anyone else laugh I little when they noticed this article right above the DOA boob one?
Well, porn and violence are in every media, as it is education.
 

robert022614

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Dec 1, 2009
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Grahav said:
robert022614 said:
I love games,but did anyone else laugh I little when they noticed this article right above the DOA boob one?
Well, porn and violence are in every media, as it is education.
That is a good point....touche.
 

SenseOfTumour

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Jul 11, 2008
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Hell DOA sure reinforced the learning that I love titties.

But yes, most games do have some redeeming features, and it can't hurt to push the positive spin on these things, especially when so many act like german vegetarians, 'always fearing the wurst'. (Sorry)
 

Freechoice

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Dec 6, 2010
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Cluefinders, Carmen Sandiego and Jumpstart are all saying hello from back in the Clinton administration.

Seriously, what the fuck happened? I loved those games and they taught me a lot of shit I no longer remember.
 

Hexenwolf

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Sep 25, 2008
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Freechoice said:
Cluefinders, Carmen Sandiego and Jumpstart are all saying hello from back in the Clinton administration.

Seriously, what the fuck happened? I loved those games and they taught me a lot of shit I no longer remember.
I was always fond of Operation Neptune myself. Of course, I never beat it as a little kid because the math on the later levels was too hard. I actually found the CD a few months ago and blazed through the whole thing. It's... actually not a very long game.
 

Freechoice

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Dec 6, 2010
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Hexenwolf said:
Freechoice said:
Cluefinders, Carmen Sandiego and Jumpstart are all saying hello from back in the Clinton administration.

Seriously, what the fuck happened? I loved those games and they taught me a lot of shit I no longer remember.
I was always fond of Operation Neptune myself. Of course, I never beat it as a little kid because the math on the later levels was too hard. I actually found the CD a few months ago and blazed through the whole thing. It's... actually not a very long game.


The final level on expert always kicked my preschool ass. The math was never a problem. It was the goddamn mutant sharks.

ZOOM, WHERE WERE YOU WHEN I NEEDED YOU MOST!?
 

Twilight_guy

Sight, Sound, and Mind
Nov 24, 2008
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This reminds me. If people think video games are so good at teaching children to use guns and kill people why don't they immediately think it would also be awesome for teaching good things, like math. Hell if a few hours of CoD will turn you into a serial killer why not pay some guy to make a math game that would, by that logic, make them a super-genius in a few weeks. I know the logic is bullshit but if they really think that then why aren't they getting on this shit and funding tons of educational games.

On topic, I question the supposed positive results here and the survey. It all smells a bit fishy. I support educational games but I don't think they enough are going to be super effective.
 

pearcinator

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Apr 8, 2009
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How appropriate! (you fight like a cow.)

I am studying to be a primary school teacher and last week, for one of my classes I did a 10 minute presentation on video games and how it can be positively applied to teaching.

Of course, I was in a class with 4 other guys and 28 girls so I don't think I fully convinced them but I don't care because I plan on implementing video games into classrooms regardless of what they think.

I am studying at Southern Cross Uni on the Gold Coast only half an hour south of Bond uni...it's good to see that other universities have similar thoughts :) Even better that it's a private university with a high reputation (and a high price) because they are looked-up to as their findings are seen as highly reliable.
 

Nouw

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Mar 18, 2009
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Quite frankly, I learnt jackshit from playing educational games in my primary school (NZ). They were far too easy >.>. That's just my experience though, not sure how others fared.
 

WalrusPowers

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Mar 30, 2011
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Universities? I always thought the Gold Coast was just for theme parks and buildings shaped like giant fruit.