Serious Games Taken Seriously 11
The annual Serious Games Summit is taking place in Washington D.C. this week, and Gamasutra has several articles exploring the events that have taken place so far. Write-ups include How Games will improve CS education, Wargaming Science, and What's So Serious about Game Design? From the Games for CS article: "So, how do games fit into this? Well, Barnett pointed out to the audience, which included a number of university professors: 'We all know of [computer science] students, particularly young men, who get started gaming.' In fact, the majority of students have experience of being able to change parameters or other attributes in games. Thus, it's believed that game-related learning may be a way to stave off the precipitous decline in entry to computer science departments - overall enrolments are now down near a level last seen in the 1970s, and the amount of women attracted to the discipline is "less than dismal," according to Barnett. Worse than this, there is also a high attrition level, with 10 to 20 percent of students dropping out each year."
So... What now...? (Score:1)
All I'm interested with in a game is... (Score:1)
Multidiscipline (Score:5, Insightful)
All of these are very applicable in the real world. Even if you work on a team, and do just one part of the whole, you still learn a lot.
Re:Multidiscipline (Score:2)
The worst part about learning game design is you have to deal with players, cheaters, and customer support.
All of these are very applicable in the real world. Even if you work on a team, and do just one part of the whole, you still have to do a lot of crap.
;) Sorry, I'm a little bitter today. Play Warband 1066 [warband1066.com]. A new game just started this afternoon.
why is changing majors a bad thing? (Score:3, Interesting)
Last time I checked, University is not the army. You are free to change your mind. In fact, it's encouraged.
Same mean, higher variance (Score:4, Informative)
In the 1970's, the only computer science related disciplines were Math, Stats, Electrical Engineering, and in some places, Computer Science.
Now that computers are everywhere, and support almost every non-humanities discipline, it may worry some that CS enrollment is dropping.
Yet, the number of students enrolling in computer-driven fields, who learn to program and apply computer science to a specific area, is increasing. There are more majors to enroll in, with the a higher number of interested students - the mean number of students enrolled in computer driven majors is increasing, but the distribution among majors has increased faster, pushing the concentration in CS down.
For instance, we now have:
and many other majors all vying for the students that, 10 years ago, would have just gone into CompSci.
You don't have to believe me, but I've seen the data for myself - I'm on the Computing and Information Science [cornell.edu] working group at Cornell University
Less comp sci students = good thing. (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Less comp sci students = good thing. (Score:2)
CS (Score:1)