Today I blogged a bit on teaching and learning with games. Are we ready for this? Are we using games to teach? Which ones do we like?

Here's an interesting article! Yeah,,, the kids want the games!

Suprised? What has been our experience?

Tags: games

Reply to This

Replies to This Discussion

Hello Sue,
Thank you for sharing the article on electronic games. I found it interesting and it makes perfect sense!
The kids DO want games! It made me take a look and see how I can implement more "electronic games" into my curriculum.

Reply to This

I use games in my class every day. I start the day with a word game or word of the day. At Maths time we do an interactive warm up. Then I teach my group of the day using Maths games as their specific warm up. After morning tea we use the Smartboard to do a literacy game as warm up. Often my reading group has a game to learn whatever our focus of the week is too. After lunch, we have a quick fun game, to regroup before settling down to whatever we are doing. My class has twice as many boys as girls, and even so, I have minimal classroom management problems - they're having too much fun! Have a look at my Del.icio.us for ideas and links.


Have fun!
Raenette

Reply to This

from a lengthy discussion on the same topic

I own or recently bought (from Ebay) or plan to buy the following software for my 4-6th graders.
Risk II
Civ IV
SimCity
Railroad Tycoon
Axis and Allies
Age of Empires
Age of Mythology
Stronghold II
Making History

Reply to This

Nancy - If you recommend those titles, you might want to explore the educational possibilities of an upcoming game called Spore... (targeted for September 08)

It is designed by Will Wright who was behind Sim City and The Sims. His original title for it was Sim Everything.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Spore_(video_game)

Reply to This

I use games to teach Math, Language and UOI (unit of Inquiry) in my class. I think it is good to start a lesson with a game or to get students' attention back when they get bored during the lessons. My students love to play Bingo, fishing, snake and ladder and many more games. As a teacher, we need to become more creative to create better learning process. And one way to achieve that is through games.

Reply to This

We have a directory of hundreds of click and play games on our Ning. EFL Classroom 2.0 , click the games tab.

I produce many ppt games and would encourage teachers to not only play games with students but most importantly get them making the content and the games themselves! This is where real learning flames.....You can see many of my ppt games if you scroll down to the bottom of the directory. Here's my latest, BAAM flags -- a way to keep kids interested by avoiding the BAAM. Edit as you wish -- I'm all about open copyright for teachers.....

David
http://eflclassroom.ning.com

Reply to This

There is a game called Wolf Quest that is created by the Minnesota Zoo. The students play the role of a wolf living in Yellowstone National Park. It teaches about the ecology in the region.

There is also Food Force created by the United Nations World Food Programme. Students have to go through 7 levels to bring aid to the people on a fictional island.

Both are freeware.

CIV IV has to be my favorite computer game, Nancy, and the only one I really play. There's a lot you can learn from it.

Reply to This

The kids love it, they also like The Age of Empires and Mythology and Sim City.

Reply to This

There is a new game out by Tabula Digita that puts the kids in front of a game similar to the Halo games that they are so crazy about. It is called dimension m. When I met the them at FETC and tried it out, it was incredible. After the students work through the units in math they are forced to test their skills in a type of battle mode. Pretty impressive. I'm not sure if they have expanded to support every state in the US yet though as they have been trying to perfect in a handful of states before expanding.

I personally use Rock Band, Guitar Hero, and Dance Dance Revolution to help teach rhythm in my music classes. Kids love that.

Reply to This


Mark Wagner and Michael Guerena of the Orange County (CA) Department of Education's Educational Technology group produced this video webcast on Games in Education back in '06.

Reply to This

RSS

About Classroom 2.0

Steve Hargadon Steve Hargadon created this social network on Ning.

Create your own social network!

More Search Tools

Google Classrom 2.0 Search
Search All Ning Networks
Search More: go to Conversations.net

Visitor Map

Locations of visitors to this page

Classroom 2.0 Badge

Free Classroom 2.0 LIVE Workshops in the U.S.

Check out our series of free live workshops around the United States on the use of Web 2.0 technologies in education. Coming up: Chicago, New York, Hawaii, Sacramento, and Boston. More details and information here.

More Information

Create a Ning Network for your own class, group, project, or event:
Need help using Ning in an educational setting?
Ning announces trial program for grades 7 -12 student networks--now ad-free:
Finding Interesting Discussions:
Forum posts can be organized by the use of "tags." To see discussions on specific topics, click on the links below. Standardized tags you can use to have your posts included in the link results are shown in parentheses. You can also help by adding tags to others' posts. (To participate in the discussion on standardized tagging here at Classroom 2.0, see this page.)

By Tool:

By Subject:
By Area:
Search By Other Tags:
Forum:
Photos:
Videos:

Translate This Network

Translate Ning
Click on flag to open new window in your language. For different language close window and repeat. Signing in reverts site to English. Code at Translated.

© 2009   Created by Steve Hargadon on Ning.   Create your own social network

Badges  |  Report an Issue  |  Privacy  |  Terms of Service