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The Courts Government Entertainment Games News

Former Supreme Court Justice Switches to Video Games 174

TechDirt is reporting that former Supreme Court Justice Sandra Day O'Connor has moved into the one industry that I don't think anyone might have expected, video games. Not only did she speak at a recent gaming conference, she is also working on creating a video game about the courts. "There have been many similar 'civic education' video games out there, like the UN video game to teach kids about world hunger and, my personal favorite, a video game to teach kids how to gerrymander voting districts to get political support. It's not clear how successful any of these sorts of games really are, but it's nice to see a former Supreme Court Justice taking an interest in these sorts of things. Though, some might point out that this could be seen as something of a gimmick, and students might just be better served by adding a decent civics curriculum back into school (it's apparently gone thanks to No Child Left Behind)."
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Former Supreme Court Justice Switches to Video Games

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  • by geekoid ( 135745 )
    Dear next president, please kill that program on your first day.

    Thank you.
    • by Sciros ( 986030 )
      I only know Obama's stance on NCLB (haven't looked into McCain's) -- he plans on "rescuing" it by cutting NASA's budget. So... if you want NCLB gone (and I certainly do), then Obama isn't your guy. McCain may not be, either, but so far I haven't heard anything about it from him and his plan certainly can't be *worse.* Still, it's far from the only issue out there.
      • Re: (Score:2, Offtopic)

        by geekoid ( 135745 )
        Clarification:
        He is cutting the severely underfunded Man to mars mission, not the entire budget.

        Well, by 'fix it' he is effectively getting rid of it.
        To be frank, I was being a little flip. If they fix the problems with it, that would be good. It would also be the same in name only.

        McCain's view is the same as Bush's. Vouchers, Privitazation, etc...
        • McCain's view is the same as Bush's. Vouchers, Privitazation, etc...

          Yeah, I always have to remember to pretend to be surprised when the Public School policies of someone whose explicit and stated stance is that they want public schools to go away ends up harming the public schools more than helping.

    • I'm not sure anyone understands the program, or the issues here. Enforcing common standards is a good thing, and yet it blamed universally when anything outside the standards isn't taught any more.

      I think it is possible to teach crucial curriculum and still find time for other classes. The problem is that teachers have little to no control over children in an overly litigious society of hyper-sensitive parents.

      And more often than not, you either have both parents working, or a single parent household, where the parent may not connect with their child enough. So when a teacher attempts to tell a parent of their child's failing, they don't want to believe it.

      We have developed this society where teachers are terrified of instilling discipline (I'm not talking about hitting kids, but rather just instilling order) so that children don't feel the need to take education seriously.

      Our countries in the world manage to pull off superior public education programs, not necessarily because of funding, but I believe because of cultural differences in which education is taken far more seriously.

      Universally blaiming "No Child Left Behind" isn't actually addressing the issues of what's seriously wrong. Conversely, I think the the concept of NCLB is a very good one. We spend more money on education. We attempt to raise the bar of public education, and hold states accountable for poor results.

      There is a great disparity between what a child in rural Alabama, a child inner-city New York, and another say here in Omaha (my town) receives in education. Individual states and school districts should have freedom and flexibility in determining their curriculum, but having a bare-minimum standard of education all American children should be given is a GOOD THING.

      If you want to see what's really wrong with public education, don't blame a politician for spending more money on education. Read some Jonathon Kozol.

      http://books.google.com/books?as_auth=Jonathan+Kozol&sa=X&oi=print&ct=title&cad=author-navigational&hl=en [google.com]
      • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

        by goofy183 ( 451746 )
        Wish my mod points hadn't just expired, you'd be getting one.

        My wife works in special-ed which has an even higher tendency to be litigious than general-ed courses do.

        It is amazing how many parents immediately place blame on teachers for their child not doing well in a class. In many cases it may well be a case of a student and teacher not connecting at some level but jumping directly into "it's the teachers fault" versus trying to find a solution doesn't help and just puts teachers and parents more at odds.
      • Re: (Score:3, Informative)

        by bigkahunah ( 1093791 )
        As a recent high school graduate (2006) I was in high school during NCLB. I do not see the program as having destroyed any meaningful civic curriculum because there never really was one to begin with. Sure the government and history teachers present the material, but as Enderandrew mentioned the parents can't stand to see a child failing or even falling short of perfection. This leads to great pressure on the teachers from parents and the school to pass all the students and inflate grades. The only thin
        • If the school administration and teachers are stressed out, that is likely poor management/administration. Grade inflation and giving A's to idiots doesn't help on the metrics being used here, which are the standardized tests.

          I understand that cramming for a test isn't as effective in long term education as practical knowledge, but if you know of a better way to establish a base line metric that isn't easily cheated or inflated, please let me know.
      • by Sciros ( 986030 )
        NCLB doesn't raise the bar of public education, it lowers it so that people who are otherwise too stupid to pass would now do so. That's how it's handled due to punitive measures the act imposes against schools that do not improve based on its standardized tests. The achievement gap is lowered, but not by briging the bottom higher; rather it brings the top lower. It doesn't force underachieving students to rise to the occasion.

        So, it's a POS.
        • I'm not sure what you mean.

          What standards have been lowered? NCLB didn't tell schools to give higher grades to underachievers. NCLB punishes schools who aren't educating their kids. How does that lower the bar?

          I'm not following your so-called logic.
      • by Arccot ( 1115809 )

        I'm not sure anyone understands the program, or the issues here. Enforcing common standards is a good thing, and yet it blamed universally when anything outside the standards isn't taught any more.

        Enforcing common standards isn't the problem; enforcing common standards while funding different school districts with wildly different amounts of money is. Fix the funding, and you fix the standards.

        I think it is possible to teach crucial curriculum and still find time for other classes.

        The problem is, if you test four different subjects (not sure how many there actually are), and don't test the rest, it would be foolish to focus on the untested subjects before the students are 100% capable in the tested subjects. You are funded because of four subjects. Your school loses funding, and you po

        • My father works in arts and music education, as one of those travelling school performers who occasionally shows up to do a show that teacher kids history using music and theatre.

          He's going to have to find a new job this year due to NCLB.

          Funding for anything that is not on the NCLB standardized tests has completely dried up. Schools *have* to do well on those standardized exams, and they don't have the funding to be able to handle the extra costs of keeping up with them *and* having any sort of art/theatre/
      • There is a problem in that the Federal government has no mandate to enforce common standards in education. But lets say the states allowed the Federal government that power, and I agree this might be a good thing to do for some under performing schools. I also agree blaming NCLB isn't addressing some of the serious problems. But by the same token, NCLB itself doesn't address the serious problems, and in its implementation is a hindrance to effective education.

        I don't see the evidence that the litigious
        • The problem is, ultimately, that parents are not having enough kids. So, whereas before, you might have one smart kid and a couple of ok ones destined for the factory, now, just that one kid you have HAS to go to college, and frankly, they may not be up to it. Instead of parents beating their children and their teachers up because Johnny isn't into books, maybe these parents should have had more kids, so that they could get one that's really and truly cut out for higher education, rather than being shoeho
          • by lgw ( 121541 )
            Have you seen how much a plumber can make? A welder doesn't excatly pinch pennies either. This idea that a college educaiton is the only way to get a technical job that pays well also has to go. Not all technical jobs are *abstract* - some are hands on, appeal to a different set of people, and can't be outsourced.
        • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

          by Enderandrew ( 866215 )
          You bring up a very good point that I was thinking about earlier. The federal government has no real authority to do I'd say 75% of the things it does given a strict interpretation of the Constitution, yet citizens expect and demand a good deal of services from the Federal Government.

          I could suggest that democracy in action has yielded a good deal amount of power, even if it wasn't implicitly stated, so that the federal government do more.

          Does the government have the right? Arguably no. Should they howev
    • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

      by R2.0 ( 532027 )
      Yeah, because there weren't any schools failing before that law passed, and states don't have a choice whether to participate.

      Perhaps it doesn't work. Fine. What would you have the government do?

      I'll start: abolish the Dept. of Education and get the Feds out of the schools. Period.

      Don't like that? What's your idea? Don't have one? Then STFU.
    • Dear next president, please kill that program on your first day.
      It's pretty obvious that you never got to take that civics class mentioned in the OP, because otherwise you'd know that it's Congress's responsibility to change or repeal laws.

  • by TubeSteak ( 669689 ) on Thursday June 05, 2008 @12:56PM (#23671155) Journal
    This game will teach generations of children how to get away with murder!
    Jack Thompson, save us from this calamity!
  • by xPsi ( 851544 ) * on Thursday June 05, 2008 @12:57PM (#23671169)
    should be well suited for this genre for all the obvious reasons (not to mention crucial ragdoll effects for the Marionette Hordes and Lobbyists, Zero-Point Energy Field Manipulator for realistic simulation of the dissenting opinion, etc.)
  • by DeanCubed ( 814869 ) on Thursday June 05, 2008 @12:58PM (#23671187)
    Coming soon to your DS - a brand new game from Capcom. Now you too can experience what it's like to hear appeal after appeal on Bush administration pet projects. Over 700 hours of game time with our new RealPaperwork Engine! Unlockable characters like Sandra Day O'Connor and Stephen Colbert! No objections to that!
  • Jack Thompson (maybe more of a mini-boss... like it'd be that hard to beat this guy)

    Jack McCoy (now we're talking)
  • by antifoidulus ( 807088 ) on Thursday June 05, 2008 @12:59PM (#23671203) Homepage Journal
    Please, Please, PLEASE do not come out with a "Sandra Day O'Conner" nude hack!
  • Just think... (Score:2, Interesting)

    How awesome would a Judge Judy video game be? You can take all the criminals from other videos and put them in her court!!!
  • I can see it now. Milton Bradley will name it, "He Who Has The Most Money Wins"
  • by D Ninja ( 825055 ) on Thursday June 05, 2008 @12:59PM (#23671217)

    ...and, my personal favorite, a video game to teach kids how to gerrymander voting districts to get political support.
    OMG! That game is so freaken awesome! I love redistricting constituency boundaries in order to get an electoral advantage!!!
  • too bad the folks at Capcom already beat them to it. [wikipedia.org]
  • You don't have to RTFA, because TFS is virtually identical to TFA.
  • I was thinking, "Lamest game EVER", and then I thought a bit more about how it could be, and maybe framed it in terms of an RPG where you start off with a character who is a new lawyer, and you get to choose career paths, and how the courtroom scenes could be a kind of mini-game where your arguments convince the jury.

    You could have stats like "knowledge" which would allow you to more accurately cite precedent to derail your opponent, and "oratory" to baffle with BS...

    As you continue through your career you'
  • by Trojan35 ( 910785 ) on Thursday June 05, 2008 @01:04PM (#23671317)
    http://www.redistrictinggame.com/ [redistrictinggame.com]

    Try it out.
    • Re: (Score:3, Interesting)

      For those of you who haven't played the game, here's a brief description:

      You are given a map (n by m grid). Each square has a number of democratic, republican and udecided voters. The total number of voters and their distribution across parties varies from square to square. The map is divided into four connected regions.

      Mission 1: change the division such that each region contains between 640K and 650K voters. Fairly easy.

      Mission 2: change the division, such that the above constraint is satisfied, and suc
  • After all, the initials SDO aren't taken yet.
  • Considering Sandra Day O'Connor's direct hand in subverting democracy, will there there be a bonus level for executing a bloodless coup by judicial fiat?
  • ... The final level is completed by fixing a presidential election, and then trekking through the Forest of Intelligent design to kill the Roe v. Wade Boss.
  • If they use the GTA4 Engine, I personally gaurantee success. Of course, kids will be rather shocked to see that in reality criminals aren't released from jail 4 hours later with nothing but their weapons and $1000 taken away.
  • While I'd like to think the legal system is responsible, if you have paid any attention to history and news lets review some of the things courts have done, its amazing people still trust the courts.

    1. Pushed political agendas
    2. Made careers for DA's prosecuting innocent people.
    3. Court rulings overturned multiple times all the way to the supreme court. (No consensus about what is the law)
    4. Family courts stripping away fathers rights or rights of parents.
    5. Supreme court deciding to rule on law or preceden
    • Wow. I just couldn't pass this up.

      1. Are you human? Yes? You're pushing a political agenda. Anyone asking for apolitical performance is just asking to be lied to.
      2. Adversarial system. Jury of peers. Courts don't make careers for attorneys who convict innocent people, and your premise is invalid and unsupported. If you're suggesting that some other metric for DAs other than number of convictions should be used, name it. False positives will happen, but must be balanced against evidentiary failures
  • Stanford 1952. That was when Silicon Valley was mostly orange groves.
  • Last thing we need is a game created by a jurist with absolutely zero discernible legal philosophy to teach "law."
  • The next GTA will have authentic court scenes?

C'est magnifique, mais ce n'est pas l'Informatique. -- Bosquet [on seeing the IBM 4341]

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