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Abarkan, Ali; BenYakhlef, Majid – Education and Information Technologies, 2022
Learning to code is far from an easy task, it is a promising approach that underscores the use of the video game culture of students to motivate them to invest their time in the practice of programming. The students in this discipline are often discouraged by the amount of information to remember and the complex and constraining syntaxes.…
Descriptors: Programming Languages, Educational Games, Computer Games, Learning Motivation
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Zachariah Beck; Brandon Alpert; Alexander Bowman; William R. Watson; Adrian B. Tepole – Biomedical Engineering Education, 2024
Video games have emerged as a medium for learning by creating engaging environments, encouraging creative and deep thinking, and exposing learners to complex problems. Unfortunately, even though there are increasing examples of video games for many basic science and engineering concepts, similar efforts for higher level engineering concepts such…
Descriptors: Video Games, Technology Uses in Education, Biomedicine, Engineering Education
Australian Council for Educational Research, 2020
The Australian Council for Educational Research (ACER) is one of the world's leading educational research centres. Since it was established in 1930, ACER has built a strong reputation as a provider of reliable support and expertise to education policymakers and professional practitioners. Each year, ACER is involved in a large number of research…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Educational Research, Achievement Tests, International Assessment
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Reinders, Hayo – Teaching English with Technology, 2014
Our interaction with digital resources is becoming increasingly based on touch, gestures, and now also eye movement. Many everyday consumer electronics products already include touch-based interfaces, from e-book readers to tablets, and from the last personal computers to the GPS system in your car. What implications do these new forms of…
Descriptors: Second Language Learning, Second Language Instruction, Nonverbal Communication, Eye Movements
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Majgaard, Gunver – Electronic Journal of e-Learning, 2014
A group of first-semester engineering students participated in a game design course. The aim of the course was to learn how to design computer games and programming skills by creating their own games, thereby applying their game-playing experiences to gain knowledge about game design. The aim was for students to develop a more critically…
Descriptors: Design, Computer Games, Programming, Computer Science Education
Caine, Renate N.; Caine, Geoffrey – Teachers College Press, 2011
Why do video games fascinate kids so much that they will spend hours pursuing a difficult skill? Why don't they apply this kind of intensity to their schoolwork? These questions are answered by the authors who pioneered brain/mind learning with the publication of "Making Connections: Teaching and the Human Brain". In their new book, "Natural…
Descriptors: Video Games, Technology Integration, Brain, Cognitive Psychology
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Halverson, Richard; Smith, Annette – Journal of Computing in Teacher Education, 2010
Information technologies have reshaped teaching and learning in schools, but often not in ways anticipated by technology proponents. This paper proposes a contrast between technologies for learning and technologies for learners to explain how technologies influence teaching and learning in and out of schools. Schools have made significant use of…
Descriptors: Video Games, Information Technology, Educational Technology, Influence of Technology
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Parks, Nancy S. – Studies in Art Education: A Journal of Issues and Research in Art Education, 2008
Art education has been in the midst of a transformation shaped by several factors, including changes in contemporary art theories, political and economic factors, and technological developments. Film, music videos, advertisements, video games and other forms of popular culture are shaping how students learn today. Discussions about video gaming…
Descriptors: Popular Culture, Video Games, Social Action, Art Education
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Dibley, Jeremiah; Parish, Jamie – Science Scope, 2007
Funded by the U.S. Department of Education, a research project was conducted to evaluate the effectiveness of video games as inquiry-based learning experiences for the science classroom. As a result, the video game, "Creature Control: The Quest for Homeostasis" was developed and field-tested in select middle schools in the United States.…
Descriptors: Middle Schools, Learning Processes, Constructivism (Learning), Video Games
Vered, Karen Orr – Palgrave Macmillan, 2008
Karen Orr Vered demonstrates how children's media play contributes to their acquisition of media literacy. Theorizing after-school care as intermediary space, a large-scale ethnographic study informs this theory-rich and practical discussion of children's media use beyond home and classroom.
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Ethnography, Media Literacy, Mass Media Use
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Selman, Ruth; Selman, Jerry; Selman, Victor – Montessori Life, 2001
Describes toys presented at the Tokyo Toy Fair in 1999 that use technology to allow users to take more creative control. Discusses video games, computerized toys, toy robots, and high tech learning aids and simulation techniques, and considers them in light of the Montessori philosophy of learning how to learn. (JPB)
Descriptors: Educational Technology, Instructional Materials, Learning Processes, Montessori Method
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O'Neil, Harold F.; Wainess, Richard; Baker, Eva L. – Curriculum Journal, 2005
Following up on an earlier issue of "The Curriculum Journal" (Vol. 16, No. 1), this article focuses on learning outcomes in the context of video games. Learning outcomes are viewed from two theoretical frameworks: Kirkpatrick's levels of evaluation and the CRESST model of learning. These are used to analyse the outcomes claimed in journal articles…
Descriptors: Journal Articles, Video Games, Instructional Design, Learning Processes
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Begg, Michael; Dewhurst, David; Macleod, Hamish – Innovate: Journal of Online Education, 2005
The term "game-based learning" has emerged as a general name for the use of computer games in education. Despite early work showing rich inferential learning taking place as a result of gameplay, most game-based learning has been geared towards using a game as a host into which curricular content can be embedded. This approach can be problematic,…
Descriptors: Constructivism (Learning), Higher Education, Problem Based Learning, Veterinary Medicine