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Vishkaie, Rojin; Seyed, Teddy; Emmons, Claire Thoma; vom Lehn, Dirk – Journal of Museum Education, 2021
Socializing and interaction are important aspects for families who visit museums. Mixed reality (MR) uses a set of technology that museums employ to encourage this behavior, but they face challenges in maintaining family cohesion with experiences across different exhibitions and kiosks. In this paper, we explore these challenges broadly to provide…
Descriptors: Museums, Exhibits, Foreign Countries, Socialization
Lusia Maryani Silitonga; Budi Dharmawan; Astrid Tiara Murti; Ting-Ting Wu – Journal of Educational Computing Research, 2024
Business simulation games (BSG) offer a unique opportunity to provide students with hands-on experience in a simulated business environment. This study aims to explore the effectiveness of BSG in promoting entrepreneurial intentions and competencies among undergraduate students. The study was conducted with 48 students, who participated in BSG as…
Descriptors: Entrepreneurship, Intention, Competence, Simulation
Johnson, Roger W. – Teaching Statistics: An International Journal for Teachers, 2019
The "Borel" board game consists of a series of experiments involving dice rolls, coin flips, or drawing colored balls from bags. Before each experiment is conducted, each player bets for or bets against a statement regarding the random outcome. We suggest that the collection of "Borel" experiments be used as a resource to…
Descriptors: Games, Teaching Methods, Statistics, Probability
Gelot, Ludwig – Journal of Political Science Education, 2021
Scholars have developed original pedagogical approaches to impart the knowledge and skills required for professional life in the area of peace and development. Experience-based learning, simulations, games, and role-plays have been used with positive results. Yet most efforts tend to overly simplify and narrow down the learning experience in…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Peace, Experiential Learning, Simulation
Conner, Christopher T.; Baxter, Nicholas M. – Teaching Sociology, 2022
In this article, we report on the implementation of using the game Werewolf as a student-centered applied-learning activity to teach symbolic interaction theory and concepts. Engaging with symbolic interaction theory can be a powerful experience for students due to its potential to challenge taken-for-granted assumptions and analyze students'…
Descriptors: Games, Role Playing, Student Centered Learning, Undergraduate Students
Flandin, Simon, Ed.; Vidal-Gomel, Christine, Ed.; Becerril Ortega, Raquel, Ed. – Professional and Practice-based Learning, 2022
This book offers various ways in which analyzing professional experience and activity in simulation training makes it possible to describe practice-based learning affordances and processes. Research has been conducted in various simulation programs in the domains of healthcare, victim rescue and population protection, involving healthcare workers,…
Descriptors: Simulation, Experiential Learning, Learning Activities, Allied Health Occupations Education
Lyford, Alex; Czekanski, Michael – Teaching Statistics: An International Journal for Teachers, 2020
Students are typically introduced to probability through calculating simple events like flipping a coin. While these calculations can be done by hand, more complex probabilistic events, both in class and in the real world, require the use of computers. In this paper, we introduce a new tool--an R shiny web app and associated CRAN package based on…
Descriptors: Probability, Games, Simulation, Mathematics Instruction
Manjorin, Jeremy Morgan – ProQuest LLC, 2022
This qualitative phenomenological study investigated the experiences of a purposive sample of eight Learning and Development executives to understand the circumstances leading to, as well as the experiences implementing Digital Business Simulation Games (DBSG) in a corporate learning environment, specifically related to the financial service…
Descriptors: Phenomenology, Business Administration, Games, Simulation
Lohmann, Robert – Journal of Political Science Education, 2020
This contribution presents and discusses the methodology and results of a panel study analyzing the effects of a simulation on students' learning outcomes. The focus is on how sustainable knowledge acquisition can be enhanced through participation in simulation as well as on presenting and discussing one way this learning can be analyzed. The…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, College Students, Simulation, Teaching Methods
Westera, Wim – Interactive Learning Environments, 2018
This paper presents a computational model for simulating how people learn from serious games. While avoiding the combinatorial explosion of a games micro-states, the model offers a meso-level pathfinding approach, which is guided by cognitive flow theory and various concepts from learning sciences. It extends a basic, existing model by exposing…
Descriptors: Computation, Models, Simulation, Games
Robinson, Andrew M.; Goodridge, Michelle – Journal of Political Science Education, 2021
Literature on simulation games stresses both the need for objective assessment of pedagogical effectiveness and the concern that such assessment may not be happening because it is too difficult. This article speaks to both points by presenting an approach to objectively assess the effectiveness of a simulation called the Human Rights Foreign…
Descriptors: Instructional Effectiveness, Civil Rights, Foreign Policy, International Trade
Spiliopoulos, Leonidas; Ortmann, Andreas; Zhang, Le – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition, 2018
We test empirically the strategic counterpart of the Adaptive Decision Maker hypothesis (Payne, Bettman, & Johnson, 1993), which states that decision makers adapt their attention and decision rules to time pressure in predictable ways. For 29 normal form games, we test whether players adapt to tightening time constraints by reducing their…
Descriptors: Decision Making, Time, Games, Adjustment (to Environment)
Perry, Tomer J.; Robichaud, Christopher – Journal of Political Science Education, 2020
Simulations are an excellent tool for teaching and have been used in many disciplines including in various subfields of political science, notably in international relations. We focus on the value of employing simulations in the classroom to complement the pedagogy surrounding political theory and related fields such as professional ethics and…
Descriptors: Active Learning, Role Playing, Ethics, Decision Making
Chen, Chun-Miin; Bailey, Matthew D. – Decision Sciences Journal of Innovative Education, 2016
To determine the appropriate level of product availability, most operations management textbooks introduce and define service level measures in a Business-to-Customer context. In other words, a retailer that wants to measure product availability in their store calculates the fill rate (FR) or cycle service level over an infinite review horizon.…
Descriptors: Business Administration Education, Retailing, Computation, Measurement
Balwant, Paul Tristen; Doon, Roshnie – International Journal of Educational Technology in Higher Education, 2021
In higher education, one commonly used teaching approach that is intended to develop deep learning is that of the 'Oxford' tutorial--a personalized Socratic approach in which an instructor discusses course-related issues with a handful of students. Even though this conventional tutorial model is well supported in the literature, it may be…
Descriptors: Tutoring, Tutors, Teaching Methods, Questioning Techniques