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Trotter, Andrew – Education Week, 2005
Efforts to merge popular digital games with education seem to rev up with every new generation of technology. The latest came last October, when game developers, researchers, and educators came together in a meeting to explore whether digital games' powerful attraction for young people could be used to pull them deeper into academic learning.…
Descriptors: Educational Technology, Video Games, Educational Games, School Business Relationship
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Van Eck, Richard – EDUCAUSE Review, 2006
With the widespread public interest in games as learning tools, digital game-based learning (DGBL) proponents now need to explain why games are engaging and effective and how those principles can be leveraged to best integrate games into the learning process. In this article, Richard Van Eck outlines why DGBL is effective and engaging, how those…
Descriptors: Video Games, Instructional Materials, Integrated Curriculum, Instructional Innovation
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deHaan, Jonathan William – Foreign Language Annals, 2005
Video games have become increasingly more popular and more technologically advanced. This one-month study used interview, observation, self-report, and reading and listening test data to demonstrate and investigate how one intermediate Japanese-as-a-foreign-language (JFL) student improved his listening comprehension and kanji character recognition…
Descriptors: Video Games, Second Language Learning, Listening Comprehension, Student Improvement
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Simpson, Elizabeth S. – TechTrends: Linking Research & Practice to Improve Learning, 2005
Research driving the mandates of the current education reform law, No Child Left Behind, indicates a 300% increase during the last 10 years in students being labeled with specific learning disabilities. In addition there has been a dramatic increase in the number of minority students labeled as having learning and emotional disabilities (U.S.…
Descriptors: Federal Legislation, Minority Groups, Video Games, Learning Disabilities
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Squire, Kurt; Giovanetto, Levi; Devane, Ben; Durga, Shree – TechTrends: Linking Research & Practice to Improve Learning, 2005
The simultaneous publication of Steven Johnson's Everything Bad is Good for You and appearance of media reports of X-rated content in the popular game Grand Theft Auto has renewed controversies surrounding the social effects of computer and video games. On the one hand, videogames scholars argue that videogames are complex, cognitively challenging…
Descriptors: Social Values, Video Games, Play, Art
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Gee, James Paul – E-Learning, 2005
This article addresses three questions. First, what is the deep pleasure that humans take from video games? Second, what is the relationship between video games and real life? Third, what do the answers to these questions have to do with learning? Good commercial video games are deep technologies for recruiting learning as a form of profound…
Descriptors: Video Games, Information Technology, Evaluation, Simulation
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Uhlmann, Eric; Swanson, Jane – Journal of Adolescence, 2004
The effects of exposure to violent video games on automatic associations with the self were investigated in a sample of 121 students. Playing the violent video game Doom led participants to associate themselves with aggressive traits and actions on the Implicit Association Test. In addition, self-reported prior exposure to violent video games…
Descriptors: Association Measures, Video Games, Violence, Aggression
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Bacigalupa, Chiara – Early Childhood Education Journal, 2005
In this interpretive study of children's social interactions in a family child care setting, children were seen to spend a significant portion of their time playing, watching others play, and distracted by video games. When children were focused on video games, their interactions with one another were disjointed, rushed, and ineffective. Because…
Descriptors: Video Games, Child Care, Kindergarten, Young Children
Schmidt, Janet – Teaching Tolerance, 2003
Children have a right to play. The idea is so simple it seems self-evident. But a stroll through any toy superstore, or any half-hour of so-called "children's" programming on commercial TV, makes it clear that violence, not play, dominates what's being sold. In this article, the author discusses how teachers and parents share the responsibility in…
Descriptors: Play, Video Games, Television, Children
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Annetta, Leonard; Mangrum, Jennifer; Holmes, Shawn; Collazo, Kimberly; Cheng, Meng-Tzu – International Journal of Science Education, 2009
The purpose of this study was to examine students' learning of simple machines, a fifth-grade (ages 10-11) forces and motion unit, and student engagement using a teacher-created Multiplayer Educational Gaming Application. This mixed-method study collected pre-test/post-test results to determine student knowledge about simple machines. A survey…
Descriptors: Elementary School Students, Video Games, Educational Games, Learning Processes
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Beckwith, E. George; Cunniff, Daniel T. – Journal of College Teaching & Learning, 2008
Computers are becoming the norm for teaching and learning. The Internet gives people ready access to text, visual and audio messages from around the world. For teachers, content is critical and the future dictates the need for major changes in the role of the teacher and learner. Today's digital tools and video games have proven to be well known…
Descriptors: Video Games, Educational Technology, Teaching Methods, Technology Uses in Education
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Wilson, Barbara J. – Future of Children, 2008
Noting that the social and emotional experiences of American children today often heavily involve electronic media, Barbara Wilson takes a close look at how exposure to screen media affects children's well-being and development. She concludes that media influence on children depends more on the type of content that children find attractive than on…
Descriptors: Altruism, Video Games, Aggression, Programming (Broadcast)
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Annetta, Leonard A. – Theory Into Practice, 2008
Today's K-20 students have been called, among other names, the net generation. As they matriculate through the education system, they are often exposed to materials and manipulatives used for the past 40 years, and not to the digital media to which they are accustomed. As student scores continue to regress from Grade 3 to Grade 12 and technical…
Descriptors: Video Games, Elementary Secondary Education, Grade 3, Grade 12
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Annetta, Leonard; Murray, Marshall; Gull Laird, Shelby; Bohr, Stephanie; Park, John – Journal of Technology and Teacher Education, 2008
This article describes a graduate distance education course at North Carolina State University, which combined science content and pedagogy with video game design. The course was conducted entirely in a synchronous, online, Virtual Learning Environment (VLE) through the ActiveWorlds[TM] platform. Inservice teachers enrolled as graduate students in…
Descriptors: Graduate Students, Student Attitudes, Video Games, Distance Education
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Larwin, Karen H.; Larwin, David A. – Behavior Modification, 2008
The Kaiser Family Foundation released a report entitled "Kids and Media Use" in the United States that concluded that children's use of media--including television, computers, Internet, video games, and phones--may be one of the primary contributor's to the poor fitness and obesity of many of today's adolescents. The present study examines the…
Descriptors: Obesity, Physical Activities, Video Games, Physical Activity Level
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