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Connected Gaming: What Making Video Games Can Teach Us about Learning and Literacy [Kõva köide]

(University of Pennsylvania), Foreword by (University of California, Irvine), (College of Charleston)
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Over the last decade, video games designed to teach academic content have multiplied. Students can learn about Newtonian physics from a game or prep for entry into the army. An emphasis on the instructionist approach to gaming, however, has overshadowed the constructionist approach, in which students learn by designing their own games themselves. In this book, Yasmin Kafai and Quinn Burke discuss the educational benefits of constructionist gaming -- coding, collaboration, and creativity -- and the move from "computational thinking" toward "computational participation."

Kafai and Burke point to recent developments that support a shift to game making from game playing, including the game industry's acceptance, and even promotion, of "modding" and the growth of a DIY culture. Kafai and Burke show that student-designed games teach not only such technical skills as programming but also academic subjects. Making games also teaches collaboration, as students frequently work in teams to produce content and then share their games with in class or with others online. Yet Kafai and Burke don't advocate abandoning instructionist for constructionist approaches. Rather, they argue for a more comprehensive, inclusive idea of connected gaming in which both making and gaming play a part.

Series Foreword ix
Foreword xi
Constance Steinkuehler
Preface to 1995 Minds in Play: Games to Be Played, Games to Be Made xv
Seymour Papert
1 Introduction
1(18)
2 The Serious Side: Making Games for Learning
19(20)
3 The Social Side: Making Games Together Beats Making Them Alone
39(24)
4 The Cultural Side: Rethinking Access and Participation in Gaming
63(20)
5 The Tangible Side: Connecting Old Materials with New Interfaces in Games
83(18)
6 The Creative Side: Tools for Modding and Making Games
101(22)
7 Connected Gaming for All
123(16)
Coda 139(2)
Acknowledgments 141(4)
Notes 145(24)
References 169(26)
Index 195