Connected Gaming

£31.00

Connected Gaming

Educational equipment and technology, computer-aided learning (CAL) Digital and information technologies: social and ethical aspects Computer games / online games: strategy guides

Authors: Yasmin B. Kafai, Quinn Burke

Dinosaur mascot

Language: English

Published by: The MIT Press

Published on: 16th December 2016

Format: LCP-protected ePub

Size: 1 Mb

ISBN: 9780262336963


How making and sharing video games offer educational benefits for coding, collaboration, and creativity.

Over the last decade, video games designed to teach academic content have multiplied. Students can learn about Newtonian physics from a game or prep for entry into the army. An emphasis on the instructionist approach to gaming, however, has overshadowed the constructionist approach, in which students learn by designing their own games themselves. In this book, Yasmin Kafai and Quinn Burke discuss the educational benefits of constructionist gaming—coding, collaboration, and creativity—and the move from “computational thinking” toward “computational participation.”

Kafai and Burke point to recent developments that support a shift to game making from game playing, including the game industry''s acceptance, and even promotion, of “modding” and the growth of a DIY culture. Kafai and Burke show that student-designed games teach not only such technical skills as programming but also academic subjects. Making games also teaches collaboration, as students frequently work in teams to produce content and then share their games with in class or with others online. Yet Kafai and Burke don''t advocate abandoning instructionist for constructionist approaches. Rather, they argue for a more comprehensive, inclusive idea of connected gaming in which both making and gaming play a part.

Show moreShow less