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Guess what? A study shows games are good

Category: Industry, Posted: 04/15/2008 at 01:00PM CDT by Creighton DeSimone, Staff Writer

munch munch munch So I just spent the better part of an hour looking through a study conducted by Project Tomorrow.

The study (pdf here) is all about technology and its effects on the wee ones. Not the Wii ones... just so we're clear. Basically it covers those from grades K-12 (students, teachers, and parents) and their likes and dislikes about the restrictions and freedoms of technology in and out of the classroom. Did you follow all that? Good. Lets move on.

The most interesting facts (and most relevant to this site) were the ones in the electronic gaming section. Putting aside the fact that 64% of the students said they played "online and/or electronics based games regularly" I was way more interested to learn how many students and teachers wanted to bring gaming into the classroom.

51% of students thought games in class would "make it easier to understand difficult concepts" and 50% thought they would "be more engaged in the subject." When more than half of your students are yearning for a new way to learn, things need to start happening. Especially when nearly half (46%) of the students said they would probably learn more about the subject with the help of a game.

I certainly condone games in class. I remember in third grade going to the computer lab and playing Number Munchers to help with math, and Word Munchers to help with... English? I don't really remember Word Munchers too much. By 5th grade we had 4 computers in our classroom and we played Gizmos and Gadgets and Oregon Trail.

Obviously we could only play the games after our in-class work was done and playing those games, while a welcome break from reading the social studies textbook, was still learning. I learned all about physics and aerodynamics in Gizmos and Gadgets. And I learned how to look up strange diseases, like typhoid and dysentery, in Oregon Trail. Not really sure what else Oregon Trail had to offer by way of learning.

Movies and television programs are used in classrooms with out question. Games, on the other hand, seem to be harder to come by. Which when you think about it makes no sense. You interact with videogames. You can try things and learn and progress with the computer. A film just teaches at you. If you're not getting it it's too late because the film has already moved on.

I guess my school was pretty progressive with their Apple IIe computer lab. Because while 65% of teachers polled are interested in using games to help people learn but only 11% are using games in their lesson. More teachers need to take the initiative and seek out the games that will help their students. I'll say this I wouldn't still know all the multiples of three if it weren't for Number Munchers, that is a fact I stand firmly by.

[via Network World]

Posted by rtanger on 04/15/2008 at 01:04PM

Two things--

Math Blaster
Oregon Trail.

Seriously, I learned more about math and aspects of my national history through these two games than I ever did behind any desk.

Posted by TheTaxidermist on 04/15/2008 at 02:56PM

Plus games are fun. They make you more willing to work so that you can get on to the Oregon Trail. At least that's how it was for me.

Posted by vincian on 04/15/2008 at 04:18PM

I learned that one can die of dysentery. The more you know!

Posted by milesjwoo on 04/16/2008 at 12:17AM

The Oregon Trail teaches more than just national history, and is more important than anything else that can be learned in a classroom. It is a lesson in hardship, tragedy, life, loss, and lust...ok, maybe not lust...but hunting too...did i forget hunting?

Posted by Flarty on 04/16/2008 at 12:35PM

really, i learned more from teachers at school than any game or documentary i've ever indulged in, though it might be an aid, its nothing more the foundation to a good education is having a good teacher, everything else is secondary.

Posted by CountSpatula on 04/18/2008 at 02:10AM

Nice! That Number Munchers screen shot sure brings back some memories. Where did you dig up that old fossil?

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