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Barbetta, Patricia M. – Journal of Educational Technology Systems, 2023
Higher education (HE) faculty are increasingly teaching online. For many faculty, this represents a new instructional mode that comes with its own set of challenges but also with new instructional possibilities. One challenge is identifying innovative and effective active learning methods that academically engage online students. Along with other…
Descriptors: College Faculty, Educational Technology, Technology Uses in Education, Active Learning
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Ali Alene Carr-Chellman – Issues and Trends in Educational Technology, 2019
This paper represents an update on my thoughts about gaming for learning 8 years after my TED talk (see https://www.ted.com/talks/ali_carr_chellman_ gaming_to_re_engage_boys_in_learning) and after several longitudinal studies conducted (mostly with Dr. Jason Engerman). These ideas have evolved for me significantly, and this paper represents an…
Descriptors: Educational Games, Game Based Learning, Learner Engagement, Ethnography
Decker, Adrienne; Phelps, Andrew; Egert, Christopher A. – Educational Technology, 2017
This article explores the critical need to articulate computing as a creative discipline and the potential for gender and ethnic diversity that such efforts enable. By embracing a culture shift within the discipline and using games as a medium of discourse, we can engage students and faculty in a broader definition of computing. The transformative…
Descriptors: Computer Science Education, Creativity, Educational Games, Learner Engagement
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Hunter, William J. – College Quarterly, 2015
In the first piece in this series ("Teaching for Engagement: Part 1: Constructivist Principles, Case-Based Teaching, and Active Learning"), William Hunter sought to make the case that a wide range of teaching methods (e.g., case-based teaching, problem-based learning, anchored instruction) that share an intellectual grounding in…
Descriptors: Active Learning, Constructivism (Learning), Learner Engagement, Case Method (Teaching Technique)
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Kooiman, Brian J.; Kim, Heeja; Li, Wenling; Wesolek, Michael – International Journal of Technology in Teaching and Learning, 2013
Video games may seem an odd place to find Common Core State Standard implementation strategies. A closer look reveals that educational principles found in certain video game genres might help update instructional strategies that no longer engage contemporary learners. These video game strategies can explain why learners will spend hours playing…
Descriptors: Educational Principles, Video Games, Play, Cooperative Learning
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Grimley, Michael; Green, Richard; Nilsen, Trond; Thompson, David; Tomes, Russell – Active Learning in Higher Education, 2011
Computer games are fun, exciting and motivational when used as leisure pursuits. But do they have similar attributes when utilized for educational purposes? This article investigates whether learning by computer game can improve student experiences compared with a more formal lecture approach and whether computer games have potential for improving…
Descriptors: College Students, Student Experience, Teaching Methods, Video Games
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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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Hogue, Andrew; Kapralos, Bill; Desjardins, Francois – Interactive Technology and Smart Education, 2011
Purpose: Problem/project-based-learning (PBL) approaches have traditionally been shown to be effective for learning within many professional programs that are directly related to the students' future career. The PBL approach has been adopted for over four decades in such fields as medicine and engineering and studies have demonstrated that…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Computer Science Education, Information Technology, Laptop Computers
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Vie, Stephanie – E-Learning, 2008
This article examines the common genre of the usability study in technical communication courses and proposes the incorporation of computer and video games to ensure a rhetorical focus to this genre. As games are both entertaining and educational, their use in the technical communication classroom provides a new perspective on multimodal…
Descriptors: Technical Writing, Video Games, Communication Skills, College Students
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Michael Young; P. G. Schrader; Dongping Zheng – Innovate: Journal of Online Education, 2006
Michael Young, P. G. Schrader, and Dongping Zheng use the concepts of ecological psychology to examine how massively multiplayer online games (MMOGs) promote specific learning processes in their players. In their analysis they identify and define nine principles of learning that allow such games to have valuable potential as tools for educators:…
Descriptors: Video Games, Learning Processes, Computer Simulation, Electronic Learning
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Pelletier, Caroline – E-Learning, 2005
Digital or computer games have recently attracted the interest of education researchers and policy-makers for two main reasons: their interactivity, which is said to allow greater agency, and their inherent pleasures, which are linked to increased motivation to learn. However, the relationship between pleasure, agency and motivation in educational…
Descriptors: Play, Educational Games, Learning Motivation, Educational Technology