On Instructional Video Games 22
The New York Times (registration required), is running an article entitled Is Instructional Video Game an Oxymoron?. In it they discuss the increasingly high profile that games are playing in educational and conciousness raising situations. From the article: "Stop Fluin' Around, which arrived in December, is one of dozens of instructional online games that public interest organizations, advocacy groups and government agencies say have become the best way to reach a generation of children and teenagers weaned on video games and the Web."
Yes, it works. Sort of. (Score:3, Funny)
Pac-Man (Score:1)
...and that you could actually spend quality time "munching pills while listening to repetitive music." [bbc.co.uk] Amazing what they put in the Smithsonian [si.edu]'s collections [si.edu].
Not an oxy, moron (Score:5, Funny)
One thing that made the game so challenging was the enemy AI. It learned from its own mistakes and my tactics almost as if it were a real intelli... gence.
Oh, my God.
All Hail Ender! (Score:2, Interesting)
Your comment makes my sig (Score:2)
from the mario-teaches-with-mushrooms dept.? (Score:2, Informative)
Hmm... (Score:1)
Of course they work (Score:3, Interesting)
The one I remember the clearest was called Kids on Keys. The game would drop letters from the sky and you would have to hit the corresponding key on the keyboard before it hit the ground. When you are in the first grade you are having too much fun playing it to realize you are actually learning.
Instructional Videogames? (Score:1)
In high school I had a shirt that I made that had the old Squaresoft symbol on the front, and on the back it said, "Fear the tutorial."
Re:Instructional Videogames? (Score:2)
"CT is Charge Time. It's charged by Speed value in one Clock"
"Select the Job command that bundles up Action Ability by the Job in the unit's sub-command"
"This was darkened items wont appear"
"Moving ability is ability tat is move"
typing of the dead (Score:3, Funny)
demo still widely available on the net- I strongly suggest everyone give it a try.
no better educational game ever
Re:typing of the dead (Score:1)
So to go fast you mash keys, teaching your child to type "kill zombies" as "klillzxombesbies". Do NOT try to code after as TotD session...
Used to be lots of educational games. (Score:3, Funny)
Some have been successful (Score:3, Informative)
These days it's all about money and profits though, and if edu-tainment doesn't pay, then you'll have a hard time getting game warehouses to finance you...
I used to love Educational Games (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:I used to love Educational Games (Score:2)
You question instructional video games? (Score:2)
There has to be at least 100,000 Slashdotters who played the crap out of that game and got damn good at math as a direct result of associating math with fun.
Of course they can be educational... (Score:1)
Showing my age? (Score:2, Interesting)
I first played it on my Commodore 64, and it was a teriffic game that tricked me into learning about world geography, currencies, art, history, etc. I remember thinking that I was getting away with something... playing a video game instead of being outside riding my bike... little did I know.
"Instructional Video Game an Oxymoron?" - Hell no!
Article in GDM (Score:2)
That author claims that a "teaching game" is an oxymoron, based on a narrow semantical interpretation: games can illustrate concepts, not teach them.
RR (Score:1)