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What Works Clearinghouse Rating
Peer reviewedTrandel, Gregory A. – Journal of Economic Education, 1999
Illustrates the game-theory concept of a dominant strategy using the MTV-network game show "Singled Out." Describes how the game show works and why this makes it attractive as an example of strategic behavior. Presents examples of how the show is used in class. (DSK)
Descriptors: Critical Thinking, Economics Education, Game Theory, Higher Education
Gura, Ein-ya – Humanistic Mathematics Network Journal, 1998
Describes a high school course created so that it is constructed of four topics dissimilar in character and bearing little mathematical relation to each other, does not demand specific prerequisite knowledge in mathematics, and provides general knowledge of game theory and its concerns. Studies students' grades and attitudes toward the course.…
Descriptors: Course Descriptions, Game Theory, High Schools, Mathematics Curriculum
Peer reviewedFletcher, Mike; Mooney, Claire – Teaching Mathematics and Its Applications, 2001
Observes the application of probability theory to a game between two players. Shows how basic techniques such as tree diagrams can be used to demonstrate optimum strategies, how the art of bluffing can be quantified, and how this might be applied to a game of poker. (Author/ASK)
Descriptors: Game Theory, Games, Mathematical Models, Mathematics Activities
Peer reviewedBodo, Peter – Journal of Economic Education, 2002
Developed a simple computer program for the in-class simulation of the repeated prisoner's dilemma game with student-designed strategies. Describes the basic features of the software. Presents two examples using the program to teach the problems of cooperation among profit-maximizing agents. (JEH)
Descriptors: College Students, Economics, Economics Education, Game Theory
Nelson, Toben F.; LaBrie, Richard A.; LaPlante, Debi A.; Stanton, Michael; Shaffer, Howard J.; Wechsler, Henry – Research Quarterly for Exercise and Sport, 2007
Gambling on college and professional sports and the influence of attending colleges with differing levels of "sports interest" were examined among athletes, sports fans, and other students (N = 10,559) at 119 colleges in the United States using multilevel statistical analysis. Athletes and fans reported more sports gambling compared to…
Descriptors: Individual Characteristics, College Athletics, Athletes, Statistical Analysis
Sanford, Kathy; Madill, Leanna – Canadian Journal of Education, 2007
In this article, we provide the results of our examination of the range of multiliteracy activities that engage boys' time and attention, and the types of literacy skills and understandings they learn through their engagement with alternative texts. We focus particularly on video game play and creation/composition as a learning activity that…
Descriptors: Video Games, Literacy, Males, Adolescents
Buckingham, David; Burn, Andrew – Journal of Educational Multimedia and Hypermedia, 2007
If we intend to teach through educational media, we also have to teach about those media. This article explores the implications of this perspective for the use of computer games in the classroom. It seeks to explain why and how teachers might teach about computer games as a medium in their own right, just as they teach about film or television or…
Descriptors: Educational Media, Computers, Games, Teaching Methods
Amory, Alan – Educational Technology Research and Development, 2007
Complex computer and video games may provide a vehicle, based on appropriate theoretical concepts, to transform the educational landscape. Building on the original game object model (GOM) a new more detailed model is developed to support concepts that educational computer games should: be relevant, explorative, emotive, engaging, and include…
Descriptors: Video Games, Educational Games, Game Theory, Design Requirements
Butler, J. Thomas – 1983
This discussion of the use of games and simulations in instruction includes a number of examples of activities that can be used in the community college classroom. Section I assesses the value of games and simulations as an approach to learning; defines games, simulations, and non-simulation games; considers the advantages and disadvantages of the…
Descriptors: Class Activities, College Instruction, Community Colleges, Educational Games
Johnson, Robert L.; Chatowsky, Anthony P. – Personnel Guidance J, 1969
Descriptors: Counseling Effectiveness, Game Theory, Group Counseling, Group Therapy
Burton, Richard R.; Brown, John Seely – 1978
This paper provides an in-depth view of computer based tutoring/coaching systems and (1) the philosophy behind them, (2) the kinds of diagnostic modeling strategies required to infer a student's shortcomings from observing his behavior, and (3) the range of explicit tutorial strategies needed for directing the tutor to say the right thing at the…
Descriptors: Computer Assisted Instruction, Diagnostic Teaching, Educational Strategies, Game Theory
Dennis, J. Richard; And Others – 1979
This discussion of games--particularly computerized games--and their potential in schools addresses several topics: what games are, types of games (free-form, rigid-form, or open-form) and their educational applications, the role of games in learning, student participation in adapting existing games for computer presentation, and special classroom…
Descriptors: Class Activities, Computer Assisted Instruction, Educational Games, Game Theory
Friedland, James – 1973
Described is the computer simulation program "PH." The program consists of three different laboratory investigations dealing with the pH specificity of enzymes. The purpose of the program is to enable tenth- to twelfth-grade students to determine a possible explanation for pH specificity in an experimental, but mathematical, fashion.…
Descriptors: Biology, Chemistry, Computer Assisted Instruction, Game Theory
McCall, Michael K.; And Others – 1972
This report provides a general introduction to educational gaming and describes a simulation game developed primarily as a teaching device in the training of educational facility planners, but also beneficial for administrators, students, and community leaders. Objectives of the game are to sensitize players to issues and opinions outside their…
Descriptors: Bibliographies, Conflict Resolution, Educational Games, Facility Planning
Mitroff, Ian I.; And Others – 1974
Management Myth-Information Systems (MMIS) are information systems which present information to a decision maker by means of stories. In MMIS a scientific datum by itself is not information, but is information if and only if it is tied to an appropriate story or myth that has meaning to the individual who needs the information, the organization in…
Descriptors: Decision Making, Game Theory, Information Systems, Management Games

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