Improving Education Through Social Gaming
A piece up at Mashable explores how some schools and universities are finding success at integrating social gaming into their education curriculum. Various game-related programs are getting assistance these days from sources like the government and the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation. "For the less well-to-do educator, the Federation of American Scientists has developed a first-person shooter-inspired cellular biology curriculum. Gamers explore the fully-interactive 3D world of an ill patient and assist the immune system in fighting back a bacterial infection. Dr. Melanie Ann Stegman has been evaluating the educational impacts of the game and is optimistic about her preliminary findings. 'The amount of detail about proteins, chemical signals and gene regulation that these 15-year-olds were devouring was amazing. Their questions were insightful. I felt like I was having a discussion with scientist colleagues,' said Stegman. Perhaps more importantly, the video game excites students about science. Motivating more youngsters to adopt a science-related career track has became a major education initiative of the Obama administration. So desperate to find a solution that motivates students to become scientists, the government has even enlisted Darpa, the Department of Defense’s 'mad scientist' research organization, to figure out a solution."Read more of this story at Slashdot.
February 9, 2010, 1:11 am| Read full article | More articles from slashdot.org
- Tags:
- education
-
Robot Teachers Enter the Education Workforce [VIDEO]
You may have had some instructors during your school years that seemed like they were simply carrying out pre-programmed, robotic... Read more | Read full article | More articles from mashable.com
-
Detached teens use Internet and TV more—or vice versa?
<!--body--> Parents of Internet- or TV-addicted teens finally have confirmation of something they have long suspected: the more screen exposure... Read more | Read full article | More articles from arstechnica.com
-
etc: Addicted to your iPhone? You're not the only one. Nearly a third of Stanford students expressed concern about getting hooked on the device.
<!--body--> Addicted to your iPhone? You're not the only one. Nearly a third of Stanford students expressed concern about getting... Read more | Read full article | More articles from arstechnica.com
-
How Twitter in the Classroom is Boosting Student Engagement
Professors who wish to engage students during large lectures face an uphill battle. Not only is it a logistical impossibility... Read more | Read full article | More articles from mashable.com
-
Next Week, 500+ Geek Talks Around the World
Brady Forrest writes "Next week, from March 1-5 there will be ~65 Ignite events happening around the world. Ignite is... Read more | Read full article | More articles from slashdot.org
-
"Spying" school agrees to preserve evidence in Laptopgate
<!--body--> The school district responsible for allegedly "spying" on a high school student in his own home has agreed not... Read more | Read full article | More articles from arstechnica.com
-
College offers freshmen a choice: iPad or MacBook
Filed under: Education, MacBook, iPadA few colleges offer a laptop to incoming freshmen (paid for out of their tuition, of... Read more | Read full article | More articles from tuaw.com
-
Chinese programmer fingered in Google attacks
<!--body--> A Chinese programmer with ties to the government has been fingered as the author of the program used to... Read more | Read full article | More articles from arstechnica.com
-
Tufts Now Accepts YouTube Videos as Part of College Application
First the SATs, then those godawful essay topics (“Who is your personal beacon?”), now this: YouTube videos have become a... Read more | Read full article | More articles from mashable.com
-
FBI, grand jury now probing high school's webcam spying (Updated)
<!--body--> The furor over the Harriton High School webcam spying caper continues to grow. The Federal Bureau of Investigation is now... Read more | Read full article | More articles from arstechnica.com

