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Showing 1 to 15 of 20 results Save | Export
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Kocurek, Carly – American Journal of Play, 2017
The author discusses how, in practice, historians often obscure the effect of women's lives, work, and contributions on their topic, and she takes special note of video game history. Using both history and film studies as examples, she argues that games historians can and should adopt feminist viewpoints to help ensure a fuller, more diverse…
Descriptors: Females, Video Games, Films, History
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Nooney, Laine – American Journal of Play, 2017
The author retells the origin story of Sierra On-Line and its historic first product, the graphical adventure game "Mystery House." She reviews the academic and journalistic writing that placed the story almost exclusively inside a narrative about early computer games, treating it as a saga of the competition between the graphic…
Descriptors: Video Games, History, Computer Games, Interaction
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Guins, Raiford – American Journal of Play, 2017
The author asks what has occurred in game history scholarship to warrant the use of the adjective "new" in "New Video Game History" and suggests an awareness of process may now be influencing the study of games. In support of this observation, he organizes the article along two interrelated fronts. The first speaks to the…
Descriptors: Video Games, History, Design, Historiography
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American Journal of Play, 2017
Jon-Paul C. Dyson is vice president for exhibits and director of the International Center for the History of Electronic Games (ICHEG) at The Strong. Trained as a cultural and intellectual historian, he joined The Strong in 1998 and has worked on and supervised the development of dozens of exhibits on play and video games. He initiated the museum's…
Descriptors: Educational Technology, Technology Uses in Education, Video Games, Play
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Acosta, Melanie M.; Denham, André R. – Urban Review: Issues and Ideas in Public Education, 2018
Educational game designers and educators are using digital games as a platform for teaching academic content, including multicultural curriculum. However, it is unclear how well digital game-based learning can coexist with the goals of multicultural education for the purpose of meeting the needs of African American children. In this essay, we…
Descriptors: Educational Games, Video Games, Teaching Methods, Educational Technology
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McBride, Holly – Social Studies, 2014
Students in this post-industrial technological age require opportunities for the acquisition of new skills, especially in the marketplace of innovation. A pedagogical strategy that is becoming more and more popular within social studies classrooms is the use of computer and video games as enhancements to everyday lesson plans. Computer/video games…
Descriptors: Social Studies, Computer Games, Video Games, Teaching Methods
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Wargo, Jon; Garcia, Antero – Journal of Curriculum and Pedagogy, 2023
Building a more comprehensive understanding of gaming literacies, this article explores the kinds of literacy practices that emerge through participation and play within escape rooms. Based on a dataset of video recordings of participant interactions within an escape room, we perform side-by-side analyses of play based on two theoretical…
Descriptors: Games, Gamification, Cooperative Learning, Literacy
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Owens, Trevor – Cultural Studies of Science Education, 2012
The 2008 commercial video game "Spore" allowed more than a million players to design their own life forms. Starting from single-celled organisms players played through a caricature of natural history. Press coverage of the game's release offer two frames for thinking about the implications of the game. Some scientists and educators saw the game as…
Descriptors: Educational Games, Video Games, Science Interests, Community
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Moshirnia, Andrew; Israel, Maya – Journal of Interactive Learning Research, 2010
Despite the increasing popularity of many commercial video games, this popularity is not shared by educational video games. Modified video games, however, can bridge the gap in quality between commercial and education video games by embedding educational content into popular commercial video games. This study examined how different information…
Descriptors: Educational Games, Video Games, Change, Industry
Tobias, Sigmund, Ed.; Fletcher, J. D., Ed. – IAP - Information Age Publishing, Inc., 2011
There is intense interest in computer games. A total of 65 percent of all American households play computer games, and sales of such games increased 22.9 percent last year. The average amount of game playing time was found to be 13.2 hours per week. The popularity and market success of games is evident from both the increased earnings from games,…
Descriptors: Evidence, Constructivism (Learning), Play, Video Games
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Nachimuthu, K.; Vijayakumari, G. – Journal of Educational Technology, 2011
A game is a set of activities involving one or more players. It has goals, constraints, payoffs, and consequences. A game is rule-guided and artificial in some respects. (Richard Wilson, 2010). According to Garris et al. (2002), define educational game play as "voluntary, nonproductive, and separate from the real world"; and they found…
Descriptors: Educational Games, Learning Activities, Thinking Skills, Skill Development
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Weir, Kimberly; Baranowski, Michael – Simulation & Gaming, 2011
To understand world politics, one must appreciate the context in which international systems develop and operate. Pedagogy studies demonstrate that the more active students are in their learning, the more they learn. As such, using computer simulations can complement and enhance classroom instruction. CIVILIZATION is a computer simulation game…
Descriptors: Computer Simulation, Active Learning, International Relations, Political Issues
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Stoddard, Jeremy D.; Marcus, Alan S. – High School Journal, 2010
In a world where students and the general public are likely to access historical information from a television program, film, or even video game, it is important to equip students with the ability to view historical representation critically. In this essay we present arguments for using film to engage students in rigorous and authentic social…
Descriptors: High School Students, Middle School Students, Video Games, Nonprint Media
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Lee, John K.; Probert, Jeffrey – Journal of Social Studies Research, 2010
This study examined an 11th grade high school class as they played the game Civilization III. Over nine class sessions students played the game in support of other activities related to several predetermined and emergent topics in U. S. history. Gameplay was whole-class oriented and involved students taking turns at the computer controlling…
Descriptors: History Instruction, United States History, High Schools, Social Studies
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Evans, Rhiannon; Midford, Sarah – Arts and Humanities in Higher Education: An International Journal of Theory, Research and Practice, 2022
We argue that students can understand an historical period by building on the foundations of their existing knowledge. Specifically, popular media can be used to develop students' historical literacies -- that is their ability to engage with past societies vastly different from their own. Our methodology takes inspiration from the ancient Romans'…
Descriptors: Teaching Methods, Popular Culture, History Instruction, Literacy
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