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Siyahhan, Sinem; Barab, Sasha; James, Carrie – Journal of Interactive Learning Research, 2011
In this study, we explored a new experimental methodology for investigating children's (ages 10 to 14) stances with respect to the ethics of online identity play. We used a scenario about peer identity misrepresentation embedded in a 3D virtual game environment and randomly assigned 265 elementary students (162 female, 103 male) to three…
Descriptors: Elementary School Students, Computer Mediated Communication, Computer Simulation, Video Games
Warren, Scott; Dondlinger, Mary Jo; Stein, Richard; Barab, Sasha – Journal of Interactive Learning Research, 2009
This article examines the qualitative findings from a mixed-methods comparison study of the use of an online multi-user virtual environment called Anytown which supplemented face-to-face writing instruction in a fourth grade classroom to determine implications for the design of such environments and the reported impact of this design on students…
Descriptors: Feedback (Response), Descriptive Writing, Educational Games, Virtual Classrooms
Dodge, Tyler; Barab, Sasha; Stuckey, Bronwyn; Warren, Scott; Heiselt, Conan; Stein, Richard – Journal of Interactive Learning Research, 2008
This research began with the premise that video game play, especially as it relates to participation in persistent virtual worlds, provides fictional spaces where players engage in cognitive and communicative practices that can be personally transformative in prosocial ways. Players' experiences with these worlds are as much defined by the…
Descriptors: Video Games, Play, Ethnography, Children

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