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Wilson, Janell D.; Casey, Linda H. – Reading Improvement, 2007
In an age where multi-media, such as video games and computer generated games, are consuming the lives of young adults, students are reading fewer novels and engaging less in recreational reading activities. Because of the ever-changing diverse student population teachers are searching for ways to be competitive motivators. Today, teachers need to…
Descriptors: Video Games, Recreational Reading, Middle School Students, High School Students
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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
Perkins, Ross A.; Arreguin, Cathy – Learning & Leading with Technology, 2007
The communication and collaborative interface known as a multi-user virtual environment (MUVE), has existed since as early as the late 1970s. MUVEs refer to programs that have an animated character ("avatar") controlled by a user within a wider environment that can be explored--or built--at will. Second Life, a MUVE created by San Francisco-based…
Descriptors: Middle Schools, Distance Education, Immigrants, Migrants
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Nikirk, Martin – Tech Directions, 2007
New video and computer game ideas reach the stage of production by a company when they are "pitched" by game developers to game publishers. Learning how to "pitch" technology products has great educational value for technology education students. In this article, the author shares his experience with helping his students master…
Descriptors: Video Games, Pilot Projects, Technology Education, Computers
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Remley, Dirk – Community Literacy Journal, 2009
This essay presents a case study of the modes used in training employees at a munitions plant in Ohio between 1940 and 1945. Theories of multimodal discourse and learning advanced by The New London Group (1996), Gunther Kress and Theo Van Leeuwen (2001) and Richard Mayer (2001) inform this analysis. With an unskilled labor force and many workers…
Descriptors: United States History, War, Weapons, Manufacturing Industry
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Warren, Scott J.; Jones, Greg – Journal of Educational Technology, 2008
There are several major challenges for instructional designers seeking to design learning games. These include the lack of access, the cost of rapidly advancing/expensive technology tools that make developing games uneconomical, the institutional time constraints limiting game use, and the concerns that schools lack sufficiently robust computer…
Descriptors: Games, Design, Educational Technology, Computer Games
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Harushimana, Immaculee – Journal of Urban Learning, Teaching, and Research, 2008
This paper develops the argument that new literacies constitute an indispensable foundation for developing school discourse among 1.5 and newcomer urban adolescents. A mother and literacy educator presents insights learned from indirectly participating in co-constructing Standard English discourse with her newcomer adolescent son through video…
Descriptors: Video Games, Literacy, Urban Youth, English (Second Language)
2003
Members met to discuss the various forms of interactive violence and the potential negative impact it has on children at this hearing. Statements made by the following individuals are included in this document: [Panel I]Senator Sam Brownback; Dr. David Walsh, President, National Institute on Media and the Family (additional documents); Mrs.…
Descriptors: Child Behavior, Federal Regulation, Government Role, Interactive Video
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Griffiths, Mark D. – Journal of Adolescence, 1991
Attempts to put ongoing U.S. and United Kingdom amusement machine debates into empirical perspective. Conducts comparative analysis of video games and fruit machines (slot machines) by examining incidence of play, sex differences and psychological characteristics of machine players, observational findings in arcade settings, alleged negative…
Descriptors: Adolescents, Children, Foreign Countries, Games
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Phillips, Carol A.; And Others – Journal of Adolescence, 1995
In an attempt to quantify the extent of home video game playing in a typical population of 11- to 16-year olds (n=816), it was found that 77.2% played video games. The most common pattern of play was daily, with most playing half an hour to an hour. A small population of players was identified whose behavior might be considered addictive. (JPS)
Descriptors: Early Adolescents, Questionnaires, Recreational Activities, Secondary Education
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Irwin, A. Roland; Gross, Alan M. – Journal of Family Violence, 1995
Assesses interpersonal aggression and aggression toward inanimate objects in a free-play setting where children played video games. Results indicated that subjects who played video games with aggressive content exhibited more object aggression during free-play and more interpersonal aggression during the frustrating situation than youngsters who…
Descriptors: Aggression, Behavioral Science Research, Children, Environmental Influences
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VanDeventer, Stephanie S.; White, James A. – Simulation & Gaming, 2002
Investigates the display of expert behavior by seven outstanding video game-playing children ages 10 and 11. Analyzes observation and debriefing transcripts for evidence of self-monitoring, pattern recognition, principled decision making, qualitative thinking, and superior memory, and discusses implications for educators regarding the development…
Descriptors: Child Development, Decision Making, Memory, Pattern Recognition
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Nikken, Peter; Jansz, Jeroen – Learning, Media & Technology, 2006
Through an Internet survey of 536 parent-child dyads, the authors researched which mediation strategies parents used to regulate videogaming by their children (8-18 years). Factor analyses revealed that both parents and children distinguished three types of parental mediation: (1) "restrictive mediation", (2) "active mediation", and (3)…
Descriptors: Television Viewing, Computers, Games, Video Games
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Oblinger, Diana G. – EDUCAUSE Quarterly, 2006
From a very early age, people learn from games and play. Parents and preschool teachers use games to teach colors, numbers, names, and shapes; the process is drill and practice. Games engage everyone, capturing their attention. People willingly spend time on task. Although students in high school and college continue to play games, games rarely…
Descriptors: Play, Educational Games, Experiential Learning, Video Games
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Barab, Sasha A.; Scott, Brianna; Siyahhan, Sinem; Goldstone, Robert; Ingram-Goble, Adam; Zuiker, Steven J.; Warren, Scott – Journal of Science Education and Technology, 2009
Drawing on game-design principles and an underlying situated theoretical perspective, we developed and researched a 3D game-based curriculum designed to teach water quality concepts. We compared undergraduate student dyads assigned randomly to four different instructional design conditions where the content had increasingly level of…
Descriptors: Environmental Education, Undergraduate Students, Water Quality, Test Items
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