Showing posts with label Serious Play. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Serious Play. Show all posts

31 August 2019

Educational Games

A man sits at a table with two children who appear to be in kindergarten or first grade, playing a board game with them. The game is a modular board made up of tiles containing roads through grassy fields, and the players are placing brightly coloured plastic pieces on the board.
This image is from the K-State Research and Extension, made available under a Creative Commons CC BY 2.0 license.
When I think of educational games, I tend to think of boring, clunky games that simply ask players to perform the task they're supposed to be learning. For example, a third grader who's supposed to be learning multiplication might play a game in which they draw a card with a multiplication problem on it, and if they correctly solve that equation, they get to move their piece along the track on the game board.

Boring. Clumsy. Essentially no different from flashcards.

Of course, a lot of games that exist teach valuable skills without making it the point of the game. Dungeons and Dragons gives players lots of practise at basic mathematics just as a result of the bonuses, penalties, buffs, and so on involved in rolling dice for task resolution. Abstract strategy games like Chess, Go, Santorini, and Hive hone players' planning, reasoning, and critical thinking skills. Most games offer opportunities to refine social skills. And so on...