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March 18, 2010

Learning is defined by the free dictionary as: “The act, process, or experience of gaining knowledge or skill.” and “Behavioral modification especially through experience or conditioning”. Looking at social learning / web 2.0 tool led me to realise that while tools as delicious can be extremely useful in an academic learning and research setting it is actually the more mundane social learning tools which hold the key to realising the theory of true organisational learning.


In his book “The fifth discipline” Peter M. Senge defines the four disciplines required to build the learning organisation:

  • Personal mastery

  • Mental models

  • Shared vision

  • Team learning

     

While personal mastery and mental models can be achieved on an individual basis, reaching a shared vision and team learning in today's large multinational corporates is virtually impossible without the help of technology. Senge states that “There has never been a greater need for mastering team learning in organisations than there is today” this is partially a result of the rate of change in every day life – a shared vision established today might not be relevant by the tomorrow, team learning is subject to the same speed of change but is also a victim of globalisation – where teams could be spread across different countries.


According to a recent Bersin & associates factbook report, approaches to learning using social networking tools “are still in their infancy in the U.K. But training organisations are realising that most learning takes place outside of the classroom or online course.” this realisation that MOST learning occurs OUTSIDE the classroom cannot be underestimated when discussing learning in the corporate space. In fact, some organisations “noted that they are working toward a 70 / 20 / 10 learning model, wherein 70 percent of the learning takes place through on-the-job experiences and practice, 20 percent through collaboration with others (e.g., coaching, mentoring, social networking), and 10 percent through formal learning interventions. This type of blended approach uses formal learning to build fundamentals. But the bulk of learning happens through carefully crafted informal learning activities.”


When looking at the multitude of tools that fall under the category of social learning the most used one in the corporate space is communities of practice. According to the aforementioned Bersin report the most used social learning technology is currently used by 24% of US firms – Communities of Practice. These communities are supported by a number of tools such as Microsoft sharepoint (with a number of plug-ins), ELGG etc.


In their article “Communities of Practice for Professional Development” Heidi Fisk and David Holcombe define a Community of Practice (CoP): “a place where people with similar interests connect to learn from and with each other — to freely share their knowledge, insights, triumphs and tribulations.” It is easy to see how the shared vision mentioned by Senge fits into such a community when it exists within a specific organisation. Team learning is a little harder to distil from this definition but if we take into account Senge's definition of it: “Team learning is the process of aligning and developing the capacity of a team to create the results its members truly desire.” then the ability to record and retrieve “knowledge, insights, triumphs and tribulations” means that the team (and in-fact the organisation as a whole) has gained knowledge which will modify the way the team (and therefore the organisation) behaves in the future.


Technological tools to store and retrieve this knowledge are critical since they are in effect the organisation's long term memory: when an employee wants to consult, for example, how the organisation dealt with a severe recession in the past he can bring it up in the internal system etc... this makes sure that learning takes place and not just an experience.


While the idea of social learning within educational organisations can prepare young learners for life in the workplace the concept comes into its own when used in universities and corporates: these are organisations which require long term memory to build on their activities in the past.

Keywords: IDELJAN10

Posted by Asi DeGani | 2 comment(s)

March 16, 2010

Chapter 7
The Impact of Digital Games on Learning

I found this an interesting read, especially in accordance with my own reflection upon the three classes currently using or having used digital games in order to complement some aspect of learning or having “the ability to make mistakes in a safe environment and and learn from them [which] is one of the key benefits of game-based learning” (Whitton, 2010, p. 104).

CommandosCommando


On the 15th of March, the S3 pupils at Dunoon Grammar School sat their S3 exam ('mocks').  In order to foster relationships - a recurring factor in much of the material being amassed as part of my studies of the MEd in Education on The University of the West of Scotland's Chartered Teacher Pathway programme - I decided to look at the interaction within and between groups of 14 year-old boys, with each group taking part in the playing of the game projected onto a large classroom display.  Each of the 6 groups would control the mouse, direct commands and filter comments and suggestions from the other groups. The pupils are about to conduct research on a topic from which they will develop and deliver a solo talk presentation to the whole class, which will be summatively assessed in accordance with SQA Standard Grade Arrangements.  I am attempting to remove and existing barriers amongst pupils and to continue fostering the supportive and actively collaborative climate necessary in a single gender (all male) class.  These are noted as “unintended learning objectives” (Whitton, 2010, p. 108) and include: “Valuable transferable skills, such as problem solving, teamwork or negotiation” (ibid.).

I was not to be disappointed.

Initial uptake was slow: I put this down to the audience and 'public performance' factor.
  There were instances of bravado and a carefree, less-than-interested approach.  One particular academic/quiet pupil made significant progress - suggestions as to having played before (private interview afterwards). 

I then released the 'walkthrough' now that they had mastered basic navigation.
  Still, there were small isolated pockets of resistance: disengagement - post and pre-play.

However, there was plenty of humour - pupil-teacher humour and a fair amount of camaraderie/praise.

Sherlock Holmes



Whitton’s provision of examples whereby games can be justified as applicable within a learning environment lend to specific areas within which I have used this game:  

  • Narratives associated with the action in the game (e.g. characterizations, back stories, future scenarios);
  • Reflective accounts of actions taken in the game and the learning acquired from it; 

(Whitton, 2010, p. 105).

It is important to note Whitton’s view that adults require close connections to be made between game-based activities and learning outcomes and benefits.  With the S1 pupils, merely adopting the game as an adjunct to a piece of study and utilizing it for a generic lesson opening activity has been enough; whilst formative assessment of daily journals helps to deliver feedback about their writing attainment.  This is certainly a justification to anyone seeking educational merit!

Myst

After a single period of this game – used with an extremely able s2 class (aged circa 13) – I observed and detected disengagements that hadn’t been noticed before from the S1 class.  On the 16/03/2010 I passed around a Pros/Cons sheet and asked for at least one entry from each pupil. 

Myst

‘Bad graphics’ featured once, but interestingly the cons noted that it was “hard”, “no one can use it” and that it was “confusing” (no context or background is provided).  What also featured was the looseness of the lesson structure and that “we all shout out at once”.

It would be interesting to allow the pupils themselves to structure a ‘best practice’ approach…

On the plus, the idea was “fun” and that some enjoyed “puzzles” and the “mystery”, “scenes” and “setting” were positively remarked upon.  Whitton offers a more fine-grained ‘Engagement Questionnaire’ that could be used in future.

Overall, I was curious about the following:

 “higher levels of engagement with a learning activity are indicative of increased learning from it” (Jacques et al. (1995) cited in Whitton, 2010, p. 110).

But that it “is possible to be engaged while not actually in a state of flow” (Whitton, 2010, p. 110).

“Lepper and Malone (1987) provide evidence that there is a link between intrinsic motivation to learn, engagement and instructional effectiveness” (Whitton, 2010, p. 110).

I shall conclude these musings AFTER I have watched the Youtube clip on ‘flow’.

Keywords: IDGBL10

Posted by Hugh O'Donnell | 1 comment(s)

March 11, 2010

Papert confirms that most pupils find school boring - not necessarily hard.  He suggests that children must be able to practice their learning, be in control of their own learning.  He posists three suggestions for leveraging games: 
  • that they should discuss their learning with adults, which aims to develop
  • a learning vocabulary;
  • encourage children to become game designers themselves;
  • game designers should not underestimate their contribution to the learning
  • development of their young audience.
I asked 2 sets of junior pupils: 2 of the 40 claimed that school was hard.

Myst

Myst
After scouring the web for technical assistance (something that still prevents me progressing with Neverwinter Nights) I have finally managed to run 'Myst' (Masterpiece Edition on my desktop PC at work.
I plan to adopt the same strategy of play as I have been doing with my S1 class,
except that in this case the game derives from no existence canon of literature.  I have two concerns:
  • Technically/Aesthetically - is it 'up to it' and will the stage 'point and click'method of navigation not appear too staggered and not flow as contemporary digital first-person games.
  • Narratively - will the pupils feel 'at sea', too unfamiliar...
Academically very able, the chosen group collaborate very well and there is a very supportive climate.

Keywords: IDGBL10

Posted by Hugh O'Donnell | 0 comment(s)

I wanted to do my game review on a game that would be relevant to my professional work – supporting the analysis of qualitative data. Initially, I looked at what educational games existed in that area.  Most of the educational games I found were aimed at K-12 students.  The people I teach are post-graduates and professional researchers.  I explored what was available for higher education. I did not find any games about analyzing text or visual media. I did consider ‘Revolution’ which is MIT’s Education Arcade’s multi-player role-playing game set on the eve of the American revolution.   http://www.educationarcade.org/node/357 It is a conversion mod of the pc game Neverwinter Nights. It is aimed at high school students but I thought it offered interesting possibilities of exploring multiple realities and perspectives on a social phenomenon.  However, the player is not acting as an analyst, so the game was not really what I was looking for.

 

 

 

I then decided to look at entertainment games – to see if any of them could be adapted for my purpose.  I felt that detective games would be the closest to the analysis of unstructured data. It puts the player in the role of an analyst.  I played Sleuth. http://www.playsleuth.com/ While I enjoyed playing it, I felt it was not what I was looking for. While the detective is in the role of analyst, he/she does not analyse material. It is more of a strategy game. You choose your character and design your avatar.  Each character has different skills so you need to devise a strategy that take advantage of your given skills and allows you to build skills in other areas.  The game automatically analyses the information you are able to collect.

 

 

I also looked at And then there was none – based on an Agatha Christie novel.  http://www.gamespot.com/pc/adventure/andthentherewerenone/index (My hard drive became corrupted after I played this game – I have no idea if this was just a coincidence.)  Again, it was not quite what I was looking for.  It was more about searching and collecting clues rather than analysis.

 

 

 

 

However, In Memoriam, released in the States as Missing: Since January was more of what I was looking for. http://www.inmemoriam-thegame.com/gb/gam1.htm  It is an adventure game mystery that mixes the game world with real world internet searches.  It also involves the analysis of textual (including emails) and video material.  The player is themself in this game.  I like the mixture of game world and real world and I think this game is the closest to what I think can be used to help in developing skills in analysing qualitative or unstructured data.

 

 

 

Keywords: And then there were none, games, IDGBL10, In Memoriam, review, Revolution, Sleuth

Posted by Silvana di Gregorio | 0 comment(s)

March 07, 2010

Bayne holds that “the discussion about the striated nature of the network is of limited relevance” I believe that this issue is of great importance, especially so in the corporate space (although the nature of such a discourse couldn't be further from that space).


It is useful to begin with definitions – when looking at the subject of the striated net I found the way in which Bayne applied the Deleuze & Gattari concept to be too polar. I believe that it is possible to define levels of striation. One simple way of defining levels can rely on continuity: the smoothest websites can be accessed using a web browser, in these the navigation toolbar is in the same place and visual appearance is more or less similar. They are followed by striations created by visual appearance (where the user needs a few seconds or minutes to reorient himself) an example of this could be the system is available to a student at the Edinburgh University:

The two levels which follow are websites which have walls between them (the need to log in) and then Internet environments which require users to use external applications to access them (for example second life). Even with the simple differences - every new environment (and with it the different visual layout) gives the user the feeling that he is in a new place which needs to be explored.


According to the the Nielsen Norman Group, a firm specializing in human-computer interaction, “intuitive equals familiar”. In other words, a space (or website) which we are familiar with is intuitive. The move between spaces on the web (and specifically between striated and smooth spaces) manifests itself as a 'difference' between the two spaces. Bayne refers to this difference: “such a difference is as likely to make the task of online learners and teachers more problematic, or problematic in unfamiliar ways”. As mentioned before, despite identifying this difference, Bayne finds the discussion behind it to be “of limited relevance”.


My personal experience, mostly in the corporate world, has taught me otherwise – This is far from being a purely academical discussion – IT managers go to great lengths to create smoothness in the striated corporate 'INTRANET': unifying the look and feel of the different components of the system and using such devices as 'single sign-on' to streamline the user experience. This is done in the corporate quest to achieve “enhanced efficiency and productivity” and to make sure that while the user is in the 'protected corporate garden' they are faced with the familiar. This ensures that new systems can be added relatively painlessly into the garden and as such, also affects learning. As such, these are the “virtual shanty-towns” that Bayne finds hard to see. It is the regulation of function and form but not of content which leads to users who operate in a smooth net where they are not bogged down by the differences and therefore do not waste time on getting to know the new place they have travelled to.


Internet users actually strive for the smoother – the number of services targeting striation is constantly growing: services such as iGoogle and Symbaloo are just two examples. These are personal portals which are dedicated to 'smoothing out' of the differences between a number of independent information sources and websites. Further examples can be found in the multitude of tools unifying instant messaging, e-mails and in boxes etc


However, even when outside the corporate space, striated spaces can have their benefits when used in an educational setting - specifically for younger children. Closed environments make sure that children are not exposed to inappropriate materials creating a “protective garden” where experiences can be had but without the inherent risk that results from the openness of the web. In fact, looking at the pedagogies that Bayne mentioned (Ulmer and LeCourt) a similar exercise to Ulmer's mystory could be very effective for younger children within the context of the striated space – preparing them to operate within the smooth one outside. In this context striated space can be a positive: enabling and empowering. These children will grow up used to using closed e-learning systems, they will not see themselves as “unfortunate... to be working within an institution in which the use of the virtual learning environment is compulsory”.

 

Keywords: IDELJAN10

Posted by Asi DeGani | 2 comment(s)

March 05, 2010

Drawn: The Painted Tower
I thought that this was an utterly beautiful looking game. Although some of the narrative segments involved pauses, cryptic message and faintly naff voice over it was still surprisingly engaging. As I explored the game I did have to be quite strategic about what I picked up, what I used, how I chose to progress... There was a lot of looking through an area of a room in the Tower and then having to find the tools/items located elsewhere in or near other parts of the room. On the negative side all those beautiful graphics came with several pauses as areas loaded (and as the areas involve only small-ish amounts of game play this could get tedious). It also felt like quite a lot of clicking around at times - just guessing at answers where I didn't know what to do. Gameplay felt a lot more fluid as I got more used to the cryptic format and I was quite disappointed when my hour long trial ended. Not quite enough to pay $6.99 but almost. I am not entirely sure what the educational value of the game is exactly but there was certainly an aspect of analysis, pattern matching and problem solving that was engaging and got my brain working in an interesting way. But it did feel much more like a highly sophisticated puzzle game more so than an Adventure to me.

Tradewinds Legends
This strategy game was quite fantastically addictive. The concept is extremely simple: you have a ship, a certain amount of cash, and a certain amount of debt. You can increase your cash (and your savings which start out at zero) by buying and selling goods around the series of coastal cities. You can also take on missions and you have to, on occasions, take on pirates. At it's heart the game is a simple trade game but there are also extremely subtle and engaging layers of strategy and analysis: you have to monitor goods prices; you can borrow or save money at different interest rates; you can choose how to arm or protect your fleet and you can expand and repair it as you need. There are lots of choices to make and almost complete control (the random factors being the quasi-optional tasks and the pirate attacks though you come to expect the latter).

Training elements are well integrated into the game - there are a lot of help screens at first and there is always help available either through help text or funny comments that indicate you are looking in the wrong place for something. Pleasingly there is no block on selling goods below their worth - if you want to play a very differnt strategy around the game then you are free to do so. Visually Trade Winds is ludicrously old fashioned but it feels bright and lively, the game play is pretty quick if you want it to be and there are some fun comedy comments, silly catch phrases and virtual banter that gives the game an enjoyable personality. And although the game is clearly very educational - there are a good number of small business owners that could do worth than use it for training themselves in some basic principles of buying, selling and doing well - it is also clearly aimed at adults with the cynical comments and roles of religious figures etc. in the game.

At set up I deliberately picked the one female character available - there were very few female characters in the game and those that were there were mystics/assistants in religious buildings whilst all the bankers, traders, etc. were men. That fits the Arabian Nights theme but is a bit irritating as a female game player. In my one hour of game play I got my character out of debt, into profit and purchased her two new ships. I was delighted and was getting enormously excited about making good trades, getting a good interest rate on my savings, expanding my fleet... I think there is a fairly good likelihood that come the end of this module I may shell out the £17 for the full version. Although the format of the game also reminded me of more sophisticated looking games, particularly things like The Legend of Zelda: Wind Waker, the actual strategies were more grounded in reality and more rewarding to play. I could see huge educational potential here for conveying basic ideas around business strategies and investment. I also thought it was a more realistic way to get a first person "Around the World in 80 Trades" type experience. Overall I found it a very engaging enjoyable game.

SimCity Classic
Sadly SimCity was yet another game which was not compatible with my Mac. Which is disappointing. Having registered for the website the only game I could access with my home computer was a water skiing game which is more of a random element than a true example of game play.

However my partner's computer (also a mac) has a copy of Sims 2 installed so I had a wee look at this instead of the online game. Although my partner has become extremely engrossed in the Sims several times (playing several different families though only usually one at a time) it is not a game I've ever been able to feel as involved in. Although I respond well to the level of control you have over decisions and the personalities of your Sim I have never been wildly impressed with the level of basic knowledge your Sim arrives with. For instance not burning down the house, not using the bathroom when needed, not cooking when hungry... if you are playing an adult Sim these are all skills that are intensely boring to train into your character.

Interestingly I have also always failed to make my own Sims embody my own sexuality because I have confused the game with my choices. I have always found it intriguing that my Sims end up baffled and juggling unsuccessful chaste relationships whilst my partner has successfully created extremely functional same sex partnerships (with an appropriate level of "woo-hoo!") in the game and her characters have been able to also adopt children in the game. I think there is something about how well the game detects your style of play that actually makes it work better for some players than others since it is hard to feel invested and embodied by a character that is not behaving as you would like. I don't think my personal goals in life map conventionally enough for the games algorithms and I suspect this may be part of the problem with my Sims achieving those goals.

There is much talk in both Gee and Whitton books about whether simulation qualifies as a game in any sense. I think the Sims offers an interesting space to consider this as the Sims is very loose and free in form but there are goals and achievements that are imposed on Sims and there are uncontrollable elements that encourage game-like play. Still I don't think it is a game exactly, particularly if games must include an element of competition. Educationally it is an interesting game as whilst it involves various lessons about life and there are some aspects that have quite interesting possibilities. For instance players with mild Aspergers could find the game's rather unintuitive/mechanical analysis of emotions and the ways in which Sims maintain relationships quite a useful aspect of the game for understanding the real world. Teens facing their first experience of independent living might find the games messages about the balue of work and planning useful. And the game has an ongoing message that education and the reading of books and acquiring of skills is always useful which is clearly positive. Having said all of which I don't think there are profound educational lessons innately included in the game. It is the subversive or agenda driven plays of the game that can lead to really interesting learning outcomes - for instance the innovative and touching homeless Alice and Kev experiment in Sims 3.


Google Earth Games

Finally I wanted to pull together my experiences of the team games we built in Google Earth this weeks. Most of my comments here are adapted from my posting on the discussion boards/on the wiki but I felt these were worth recognizing in the blog here.

Team Lara
This was my team's game so I will not discuss my thoughts of it (see my blog post for weeks 5&6 for that), only link to it: http://goteamlara.wordpress.com/



Team Zelda
Team Zelda created a game using a PowerPoint introduction (which caused a few Mac hiccoughs but looked fantastic when I got it working) that explained a mission to identify camps for victims of the recent Haiti earthquake.

The tough part for me was trying to find any sort of site that might be suitable for a camp. I didn't get organised enough to contact my Team Lara colleagues and take part as a team mission - this was something encouraged in the game's introduction and I can see that this would be better was to play - but did lots of exploring on my own. I found the many Haiti layers (provided in a special package created for Google Earth after the earthquake) a little confusing but, more than that, I also found the material quite upsetting to view. It's one thing to see footage on the television but the sheer density of housing and the level of destruction of those buildings made the task at hand quite daunting.

I explored around for several hours as there was absolutely no issue of my not feeling engaged or involved in the game I just felt involved enough that I wanted to do a good job. The aftershock layer really concerned me - I felt I should be looking up further information on earthquake areas and long term damage as I really don't know much about this topic and the idea that my role in the game was taking responsibility for setting up a camp like this (even just within the realm of a game) made me feel under-qualified and nervous about cementing my choices.

In the end I went for sites that looked safe, clear, and relatively accessible:

  • 18°32'57.18"N, 72°20'50.86"W
  • 18°32'23.27"N, 72°20'59.49"W
  • 18°32'54.10"N, 72°20'53.82"W
  • 18°33'4.06"N, 72°20'49.63"W

I suppose it would have been good to have a better idea of the pluses and minuses of different sites (particularly those further outside town) in terms of long term issues but I think the bounds of the challenge were well set out in the mission document.

I really liked the game but it was tricky to find the time to do it justice. I could see it working really well in a classroom context as there was a huge number of really interesting and educational discussion points that would be raised by browsing the images and maps and trying to find a good site. I particularly found that the images allowed me to find out so much more about the poverty and organization of Haiti that made sense of subsequent news covefrage around international assistance and practical matters of delivering aid. I found this game a really interesting way to gain insight of a current event and part of the world I soon realized I only knew a tiny bit about. I thought it was also a clever way to leverage all the specially collated resources that wouldn't otherwise have been available for this part of the world.


Team Mario


The Team Mario Game revolved around Food Miles. It was a short simple game in which you watched a video about food miles and the origins of super market food and then had to select items for a stir fry with each decision a trade off between food miles and ethical points.

From the decisions I made I travelled 4609 foodmiles and scored 22 ethics points. A pretty good score based on the guidelines for the game.

I really liked the simplicity of the idea and the execution was beautiful. I did think there should be a more ambiguity in the choices though, perhaps allowing me to make choices before telling me the various good and bad points of each ingrediant. That way I would be more likely to be surprised and find the information memorable. The game's protein choices were prawns and beef but as I was playing my partner also suggested that a vegetarian option like Tofu would have raised a number of useful food miles, ethical and environmental issues that are interesting and useful to discuss. One observation of this game was that it didn't quite feel like a game but I did like that the game allowed the player to make their own choices and the difference in the miles/points clocked up by my coursemates showed how differently it was possible to play.

It would have been great to have a follow up and/or reflection activity to go with this game, particularly if it made you take a look at your own supper or fridge contents or shopping habits (how you get to the shops/waste etc) with a similar critical eye as this would help with the further discussion of grey areas in ethical shopping. In the game as it stood I did really like the contrast of food miles and ethics that was painted. The idea that there are positive ethical and economic benefits to consuming produce from developing countries is a nice touch since awareness of food miles and waste is more acute than awareness of complex agricultural issues at present.


Team Sonic

Team Sonic built their game on a Climate Change layer created by the Met Office. Game play involved undertaking a number of small tasks around the issues of climate change and requiring the reading of first person accounts from the developing work, completion of quizzes, etc. in order to find letters for an anagram that would complete the game.

I found this a really interesting game and the tools and accounts certainly help highlight risks and issues surrounding Climate Change. I think the anagram was a nice idea to bond the game together but I'm not sure if the path from the [final resolved meaning of the] anagram to the specific issues raised in the game is really that clear cut which is an issue in an educational game. Cause and effect are extremely complex in this context and although personal accounts and predictions illustrate the possible consequences of climate change I felt that there was scope here to highlight the problems inherent in such a grey area - say by bringing in issues of natural and man made carbon release, politics around renewables etc. In a classroom context and/or as part of a sound curriculum on the intensely complicated interplay of factors in climate change and the cost/benefit implications of various courses of actions I felt this could be a really useful game though.


Overall I found this a fantastically stimulating few weeks of game design and game play leaving me with huge food for thought.



Keywords: adventuregames, Drawn, Drawnthepaintedtower, IDGBL10, Sims, simulation, strategy, strategygames, TeamLara, TeamMario, TeamSonic, TeamZelda, TradeWinds

Posted by Nicola Osborne | 5 comment(s)

March 04, 2010

This is a very brief post to list the games I have been thinking about as possible subjects of my game review for the first assignment:

Keywords: assignment, gamereview, IDGBL10

Posted by Nicola Osborne | 1 comment(s)

This was a really challenging pair of weeks as we were designing our own games in Google Earth. I was working as part of "Team Lara" and it took some time to get a sense of what might be practical in the space in the time available. Google Earth looks beautiful but our team of three didn't have a lot experience with it and our schedules were rather out of synch so we needed to find a practical way to combine ideas into an engaging and coherent game. Having decided upon the theme of the Seven Wonders of the World (rather inspired by our team name and the Lara Croft Tombraider games) we turned to this week's recommended reading for advice on where to start.

Whitton (2010 [1]) was an incredibly useful and practical resource for designing a game. We decided to start sketching out our idea for the game - a sort of treasure hunt based on cryptic puzzles and using Google Earth to understand and explore the Seven Wonders - and clarify our learning objectives. We decided that the players would, through playing the game:

    •    Learn about the 7 wonders of the ancient world.
    •    Gain confidence in using Google Earth as a discovery tool.
    •    Practical experience of analysing a learning game.
    •    Use the internet to locate information based on a supplied brief.

Having had a real-time chat in Skype and various discussions about how the game could work and be built we turned our idea and learning objectives into a game specification (which can be seen in the password (which is: voncroy) protected part of our game) using the example offered by Whitton (as per Table 6.2 on p. 101 of 2010 [1]) as a template. Although we did take note of all the considerations highlighted in Whitton (2010 [1] and [3]), Gee (2003 [2]), and other readings we have encountered it proved, in practice, very challenging to build training elements, control, immersion, challenge, reflection etc. into a short game. Indeed as I was looking at the readings this week I initially assumed many of these principles applied primarily to games with complex structures and multiple levels - as per many of the games highlighted by Gee and Whitton - but in practical terms I am aware that many educational games are for quite specific purposes with only a few levels so it seemed to be a really appropriate to be trying to get the wider principles to fit within the constraints of a short focused game. 

Having said this a conversation did break out on the discussion boards about training levels in larger games but I felt that Gee (2003 [2]) was suggesting adopting some of the training techniques not just as stand alone levels in elaborate games but as a subtle element at the beginning of smaller/less complex games and/or a continuing way to pass knowledge on to the player/learner throughout the learning games. I may have interpreted this erroneously but it was what I felt he was suggesting. A lot of learning games are rather clunky to get going and the evolving level of help you see in commercial games (which I believe both Whitton and Gee acknowledge include learning points throughout) tends not to be as subtley or flexibly included. The question of motivation for completing training levels was also raised and I think that is an interesting issue. My own experience has rarely been frustration at training levels but I play games infrequently enough that I basically always need the assistance. Gee conciously draws parallels between the training and game play conventions of games that reveals that he is not only investigating these as an academic but is also predisposed to enjoy certain types of games himself and is playing each game with knowledge of games played before. These seems worth raising since "predisposition" includes factors of motivation, culture and gender and these are very important in understanding the expected training and gameplay skills in a new game. Subtle and flexible mentoring is certainly extremely difficult to replicate in any training level, even given the cleverness of the Tomb Raider training levels that Gee discusses at length.

It is actually really interesting, in thinking about this topic, to see what does and doesn't work when initially restricting access to a game to training levels only. When attempting to play Myst (several times) I found myself trapped in a training level which made me feel quite frustrated but also left me wholly unengaged. I had no motivation to try progressing since nothing seemed to happen - and I seemed unable to succeed - no matter what I did or clicked. If you pitch these things wrongly it can be utterly disheartening and lead to an abandoned game (as both Gee and Whiton observe - and as that Dara O'Briain clip [4] a few weeks back also observed). That type of frustration is annoying - and potentially unprofitable - in entertainment games but potentially near disastrous to the learning process for educational games. Perhaps the answer could lie in a vision of the future recently shared at the DICE conference [5] that the world will become points based and that you can jump levels through purchases? Points and purchasable level jumps are features of some games, particularly those built on social networking platforms, but the vision painted offers a radically different view of how the "real" and the gaming worlds could intersect and, in such a world, a training level that left you stuck in a gaming cul-de-sac would be profoundly unacceptable.

Collaboration does offer a (rather more realistic) potential compromise between what is possible within the algorithmic universe of the in-game training and what is possible in most teaching environments. Whitton (2010 [6]) mentions Vygotsky's Zone of Proximal Development (1978 [7] - also mentioned by Dr Hamish Macleod in Week 3 of this module) and those ideas of scaffolded learning - that others in a learning environment can help learners progress past a point they might other reach by assisting and referring them as needed - offer quite a nuanced form of collaborative working in gaming environments (where that is possible).  I think games that foster collaboration between peers - where, say, you might want an informal chat about how to do a particular move and/or where there may be a strong online community helps new players train and learn (things raised by Greenfield [8] but applicable to educational games too) - can be seen to have significant value (our own game fostered collaboration almost by accident as you'll see at the end of this post). This sort of peer collaboration around a game may also be more achievable than in-game social interaction which, as Whitton talks about herself, may be tricky to achieve especially with a niche games audience (indeed one of the games I found most frustrating in Week 4, Quest Atlantis, is in fact built to support synchronous in-game collaboration (though not apparently enabled on our test user accounts) and is intended to compliment classroom teaching with teacher participation so may, in a realistic context, work extremely collaboratively and rewardingly). 

Something that certainly challenged my previous understanding of games this week was the discussion in Gee (2003 [2]) of the unique linguistic styles of training levels and game narratives. I have always hated the video introductions to games and have seen them as very disruptive to game play but I have clearly missed a trick - and a lot of good advice about game play! Having said with this training approach it's not common to every game and I notice that a lot of puzzle games and a lot of games pitched at younger players roll out skills in levels in game hierachies that are just as complex but do so through less cryptic, often more visual training cues.

In building the Team Lara game, which we had now called "A Wonderful Quest", we tried to establish what sort of training and collaboration would suit the compact size and scope of the game. Because our target audience was expected to be our fellow IDGBL10 learners we decided that providing training on how to use Google Earth was not required as we had all been asked to look at and use the space for our games. I think in retrospect this was perhaps an error on our part because each team, having now seen all their games, clearly had quite different perceptions of the best ways to use Google Earth and some seemed far more experienced as users than others. We also limited our game to those willing to learn about Google Earth and, though we published our game on a public blog, this does mean that our audience is still relatively restricted. Indeed we had several tough decisions to make in setting up our game. The first was whether or not to explicitly state that the game was about the Seven Wonders of the World. Although this is not a hard to detect facet it certainly made the clues easier to solve. We decided not to tell players at the outset that all the clues pointed to a Wonder but we did use a Seven Wonders layer for Google Earth (since many of the Wonders are hard to locate on modern maps otherwise) and we included a simple How to Play section that showed players where to get this layer, which layers they should have switched on and the approximate format and goal for the game. We sort of assumed many people would see the name of the layer and make the connection to the Seven Wonders of the World but decided to leave that discovery as one of the early rewards of exploring the game.

Writing clues proved to be quite an unexpected art form. We thought we knew what we wanted to do: use the Seven Wonders to indicate seven letters that would form an anagram of the password to the treasure. Since we had picked a password that referenced both the source of our team name and the discussion in Gee [2] we thought it would be quite easy to guess and therefore tried not to give the clues in a straightforward order or provide any additional clues to what the password might be. In retrospect I see that this made the game more complicated but, at the same time, still think there was value in our initial fear that the game would be more fun if it was about exploring the clues and the themes - and more intrinsic rewards - than if it was more specifically focused on completion and final achievement - a more extrinsic motivation given that initial playing of this game would largely be triggered by course requirement rather than pure interest in the game. To try and encourage reflection and collaboration we encouraged players to comment on clues (taking our cue from a treasure hunt game, Hunt the Poem that was online for February's One City One Book initiative Carry a Poem) but we found that players actually chose not to do this - perhaps because they wanted to keep answers to themselves, perhaps so as not to share/reveal answers too early, perhaps because they did not want to be seen to get things wrong. No matter what the reason was I was delighted when Team Sonic not only cracked the clues and completed the game but also shared their collaborative efforts with us (Team Lara). It turned out that they had decided to share their findings with their group in their private area of the module discussion boards. By comparing ideas, thought processes and possible answers they were then able to explore possible passwords and work backwards to confirm their answers to the clue. This was actually a method we thought some players might take though the terms in which Team Sonic discussed their discovery of the answer indicated that they felt it was almost a cheat to find the password and then check their answers which suggests we failed to communicate that we wanted people to learn about the Seven Wonders (and about where they sit on a modern view of the world) much more than we minded how they did that. It also highlighted to us that our obvious-seeming clues were actually quit tricky. Perhaps the addition of an easier or example clue might have helped engage users and build their confidence for solving the clues, confidence certainly seemed to be  factor in how long players engaged with the game and how satisfied with their performance they were. Which is interesting as I don't feel Whitton or Gee fully address that subtle need to have someone (the games designer?) confirm that "no, you are on the right lines" or "good but have you considered..." or similar. I know for our game that would have been a super addition although Team Sonic's collaborative approach certainly enhanced the game play of our game and I think I would recommend working with a friend in the "How to Play" section if we were creating it again.

All of which confirms to me that "A Wonderful Quest" was a fantastic learning experience but that the user testing (which effectively our games launches acted as) was also essential as no matter how much theory is applied ultimately it is crucial to get direct feedback on how fun or engaging a game is to play. Knowing it does the right thing in terms of learning is no use if no one wants to play!


    •    [1] Whitton, N. (2010). Chapter 6, 'Designing a Digital Game for Learning'. In Learning with Digital Games: A practical guide to engaging students in higher education, London: Routledge.
    •    [2] Gee, J. P. (2003). Chapter 5, 'Telling and Doing: Why doesn't Lara Croft obey Professor Von Croy?'. In What video games have to teach us about learning and literacy, New York: Palgrave Macmillan.
    •    [3] Whitton, N. (2010). Chapter 8, 'Using Existing Digital Games for Learning'. In Learning with Digital Games: A practical guide to engaging students in higher education, London: Routledge.
    •    [4] "Dara O Briain - Charlie Brooker's Gameswipe". YouTube clip retrieved from eightySeventh's channel 1st February 2010. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eG3aHvPG6H8
    •    [5] Schell, J. (2010). "Design Outside the Box". Presentation given at DICE 2010. Accessed and viewed online on 1st March 2010. http://g4tv.com/videos/44277/DICE-2010-Design-Outside-the-Box-Presentation.
    •    [6] Whitton, N. (2010) Chapter 3, 'Understanding the Pedagogy of Digital Games'. In Learning with Digital Games: A practical guide to engaging students in higher education, London: Routledge.
    •    [7] Vygotsky, L. (1978). Mind in Society: The Development of Higher Psychological Fuctions. Cambridge, MA: Harvard Univeristy Press. 
    •    [8] Greenfield, P. M. (1984). Chapter 7, 'Video Games'. In Mind and media : the effects of television, video games, and computers. Cambridge, Mass: Harvard University Press.

Keywords: AWonderfulQuest, EducationalGames, IDGBL10, TeamLara, TeamSonic

Posted by Nicola Osborne | 0 comment(s)

March 01, 2010

In an article by Donald H. Taylor in the December 2008 issue of inside learning technologies the author describes the process by which the early LMS systems were designed: “How did the vendors or the market researchers they employed, guess what functionality to include in their LMS1.0? They asked potential clients.” This process, carried out in the late 90s was applied to most other types of software (apart from those following a worse process – ask the developers to build them wherever they can). According to Taylor the result of this process was a “functionality wish-list based on solving today's issues piecemeal, not building something better for the future.” To me, this is the embodiment of: “you don't know what you don't know” – we invent things, solve problems and imagine based on what we know and experience: as a result we miss out on “the trick of doing things better or differently.”


Taylor provides the following table as an example:

PAPER-BASED APPROACH

TECHNOLOGY 'REPLICATION'

TECHNOLOGY EXTENSION

Provide manuals for instruction in the classroom.

Provide the same manuals in PDF online with no tutor support.

Divide resources into:

A. Reference manuals, cross-referenced and with great searching

B. Easily searchable instruction manuals

C. EPSS/help systems

D. Provide people for help were they can have the most effect.

Collect paper evaluation forms after every class and analyse obsessively.

Collect electronic evaluation forms after every class and analyse obsessively.

Forget evaluation forms and instead identify skill gaps prior to learning.

Collect paper-based performance / competency information once a year during an annual review and do little with it.

Do the same, but electronically.

Do the same, but use Internet technologies to make the information always in view and always linked to performance.

 

I believe that VLEs have suffered from a similar fate to that of the corporate LMS. However, we are now starting to see systems that use technology to extend, not fix, our paper-based everyday life. This 'extension' is critical to enabling learning in the information age where access to and contextualisation of information transforms it into knowledge.


These new 'systems' are not actually systems at all – the concept of content aggregation allows the user to 'pull' specific pieces of information and connect them together into a context relevant to him / her. Content aggregation systems have also gone from replication to extension; As explained in the mash-up wiki the two types of content aggregation systems – portals and mash-ups are different in that portals allow you to display information from different sources in the same way that this was exposed. In essence this is technology replication: by 'cutting out' the pieces of information that interests us (in the form of RSS feeds and similar) and glue them together on the same sheet we create the portal. On the other hand, the mash-up is actually technology extending an everyday task: it allows a user to take the raw data behind webpages (and other sources) and to re-contextualise it.


UKsnow mash-upAn excellent example of the more advanced content aggregation is the recent mash-up of tweets and Google maps: tweets that scored local snow out of 10, gave their postcode and used the tag uksnow were mapped on to a Google map of the UK essentially transforming raw data (tweets) into information by means of contextualisation. This can be found at: #uksnow Map 2.0 (see screenshot).


Moving forward, there is no doubt in my mind that the solution is, as mentioned by Wilson et al, standardisation. However, it is very important that we do not choose a rigid, limiting set of standards which are based on APIs and ensure that only students who have programming abilities can create a personalised environment. The answer to this could easily be products like Yahoo! Pipes or Apatar which rely on a visual model to facilitate the mashing-up. The one point on which I disagree with Wilson at al is that this is not the future: mashing up is happening every day by users who are not programming savvy. In fact, the ability to contextualise without external intervention opens up an additional option which current systems do not deal with – informal learning.


Tying the student's ability to contextualise raw data using today's e-portfolios will eventually lead to the more students centric approach that Ayala is pushing for. Personal development plans will define the path and competencies and skills rather than exam results will be the outcomes. This will of course mean that the targets system today in place will need to be abolished – that will happen eventually if not through intelligent governing than as a result of pressure from the corporate sector that needs capable employees.


At the end of the day, and probably in the same manner as they did in every century, schools and universities will have to equip students with the tools to learn and continue learning. From the introductory: enabling students to read through the basic – understanding how to access websites and how to evaluate their content and on to the intermediate: creating basic mash ups to the advanced: manipulating data in its raw form. Being the information technology the digital natives of tomorrow will move within the scope of consuming digital information and creating raw data (coming from researchers in universities and corporate). Anyone lacking the tools to process the never ending sea of data will be consigned to an underclass equivalent to today's illiterates.

Keywords: IDELJAN10

Posted by Asi DeGani | 4 comment(s)

"Pedagogy and Design" sparked quite an interesting cross section of discussions around the readings partly because of the quite different approaches taken by those discussing games design for school age children versus those designing for adults/older learners in Higher and Further education. I started with reading Whitton (2010 [1]) who specifically addresses the needs of adult and older learners drawing on Knowles' (1998 in [1]) key premises of adult learning theory/andragogy as a framework. I think it is quite interesting that Whitton addresses the difference between the needs of children and older learners - she questions the idea that "games are motivating" or that "all students like playing games to learn" - though she does not seem to recognise that this assertation is also likely to be flawed for some child learners as well. I actually think many of Knowles' premises also apply to a wider group of learners, in particular the idea that "Adults need to know why they need to learn something before they are willing to invest time and energy in learning it..." (Knowles 1998 as quoted in [1]).  Although children are certainly obliged to attend school I think this particular principle actually holds true for children, older learners and even training contexts. Motivation is a key factor to making any learning environment work so whilst I agree with Whitton's observations about adult learners - and her findings from studying leisure game usage even with non-gamer adults - I think that Whitton's comment that "It is crucial also that students are aware of the educational benefits of any game and feel that it has a true purpose in the context of their studies" (p. 41 in [1]) is thus applicable to the engagement of any learner regardless of age.

Whitton's highlighting of the fact that not all games will suit all types of gamers does, however, raise some interesting issues for including games into a teaching programme. There will, however, also be limitations of access in many games since the most immersive and engaging games are often slick and multimodal and that offers challenges ranging from game and learner style through to accessibility (e.g. compatibility with screenreaders etc.) through to the types of hardware needed to run a game. As a mac owner I have occasional but important problems gaining access to games that PC using gamers have access to. For instance games like The Sims - which explicitly advertises it's Mac version - can take months or years to port from PC to Mac though even this puts it in the minority of PC games since most do not bother to create a Mac edition at all. My Unix and/or Linux using friends also find themselves excluded from using various games. Since higher education students are increasingly expected to provide their own computing equipment (with institutions providing wifi and power points rather than a profusion of computing labs), that compatibility issue will form a (minor) part of learners' expectations along with the (major) issue of pedagogical justification.

In terms of motivations for playing, learning and learning through games I found Malone (1982 [2] and 1980 [4]) really interesting but very flawed. Malone's Heuristics for Designing Enjoyable User Interfaces (1982 [2]) for instance seemed to be based on examples where many more factors were at play than Malone chose to recognise. Discussion around this reading we have examined the role of gender in feedback and the construction of fantasy in learning games. Malone draws on a Darts game for his example here (a fairly male dominated sport/representation to use) and it's usage in a teaching analogy for math (a subject ) where a positive outcome results in destruction (balloon popping) and a negative outcome results in a numeric indicator (on what appears to be a more logical part of the number line than is actually shown if a positive outcome is achieved). It's a baffling visual analogy in terms of the maths it intends to illustrate and I have found myself failing to see either the fun or the achievement of  learning outcomes in the game

The intrinsic fantasy in the game may tie skills to plot but they do not provide much in the way of motivation if the popping of balloons (quite an odd reward) is not sufficient. In his experiment Malone found the addition of music (at the end as a reward for achievement) to be the most popular addition with his female subjects. This addition is an additional pay off for the balloon popping. For the boys observed I think the balloon popping was seen as a reward itself, much as is the case in first person shooter games where it is the process of violence (gory effects, sounds, etc) and the process of inhabiting the character than it is about the reward of reaching the end goal. I suspect in the Darts fantasy the girls may have seen the balloons popping as a form of feedback but not a reward in itself, making the addition of music that much more motivating. Indeed accounting for individual expectations, cultures and experiences is a difficulty for any teaching but particularly in games design I think as the immediacy and human interaction and feedback cannot always be taken for granted as easily as any more direct relationship between tutor and/or course designer and student.

Malone (1980 [4]) seemed stronger as a paper to me - despite being based on 'intuition" rather than experiment - as Malone highlights convincingly the importance of intrinsic fantasy in games as opposed to the extrinsic fantasy of unrelated goals and rewards. This sits really interestingly with research I have recently heard about that has been undertaken on the motivational effects of performance related pay which has shown financial incentives often do not map to better achievement and sometimes lead to worse performance - this would seem to be a wider confirmation that there is something innately more engaging about tasks and objectives that can be motivating in and of themselves than tasks where one is encouraged to perform only in order to receive some abstract reward one desires.

Finally this week I wanted to turn to Quest Atlantis and the two remaining readings Barab, Arici & Jackson (2005 [3]) and Barab, Thomas, Dodge, Carteaux & Tuzun (2005 [5]) where the authors, also co-creators of Quest Atlantis (QA), talk about their work on the project and their conception of a "Learning Engagement Theory" and, interestingly, the development of QA the brand, rather than the technology. I think what I found interesting about both papers was the background information on the evolution of QA through research and ethnographic observation of quite an eclectic mixture of schools and community groups and the co-creators immersion in existing childrens games and environments. This shows through in the game - it is clearly a well founded concept (though as a test user it is hard to experience the collaborative and social aspects (Turkle 1995 quoted in Barab et al 2005 [3])) but also perhaps a few years out of date and based on what is available rather than what might exceed expectations in quite new and different ways. Nonetheless the visual panache of the game is impressive even when game play seems, as a lone player of the game as a stand alone experience, rather constraining (see my earlier post for more on this).

What I would be interested to see after this week, if such a thing exists, is a paper outlining the design process of a successful commercial game that could be compared. I think a genuine issue with educational games and in making them fun is that the funding to test and iterate designs is simply not as viable in the education sector. Thus it is not the educational content that makes many educational games seem particularly dry but the more academically structured development process that seeks not only to embed pedagogy in design but also seeks to ensure that the design process is academically valid - which is an interesting restriction to place on a design process that needs to be creative and original as well as educationally valuable. It's certainly something that I will need to consider further before developing my idea for the final game assignment for this module.


    •    [1] Whitton, N. (2010) Chapter 3, 'Understanding the Pedagogy of Digital Games'. In Learning with Digital Games: A practical guide to engaging students in higher education, London: Routledge.
    •    [2] Malone, T.W. (1982) Heuristics for designing enjoyable user interfaces: Lessons from computer games. Proceedings of the 1982 conference on Human factors in computing systems table of contents. Gaithersburg, Maryland, United States. (pdf)
    •    [3] Barab, S., Arici, A., & Jackson, C. (2005) Eat your vegetables and do your homework: A design-based investigation of enjoyment and meaning in learning, Educational Technology, 45(1), pp.15-20
    •    [4] Malone, T.W. (1980) What makes things fun to learn? heuristics for designing instructional computer games. Proceedings of the 3rd ACM SIGSMALL symposium and the first SIGPC symposium on Small systems table of contents. Palo Alto, California, United States.
    •    [5] Barab, S., Thomas, M., Dodge, T., Carteaux, R., & Tuzun, H. (2005) Making learning fun: Quest Atlantis, a game without guns, Educational Technology Research and Development, 53(1), pp.86-107

Posted by Nicola Osborne | 0 comment(s)

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