Article #1: "New Use for Video Games"
This article that I found is about a teacher and the University of Missouri and how he is now using video games as an assignment for students and their homework. "Cho wants skeptical parents to understand that games can teach concepts, while books teach terms. "Games you can really manipulate the world, you can really interact, you can really solve problems you can think about how to solve or use your resources," Cho said. Games like Portal might not look educational but it's all about strategy and problem solving, such as if the player shoots through a particular spot the player is safe, but if the player shoots a little higher, it's game over. Games that have very complex goals require that kids learn a lot of skills to proceed up through the levels.”
It is interesting how many parents write off the use of strategy in life, and therefore forget that it is a skill that needs to be learned, and taught for that matter. Video games are an excellent way for children and teens to learn strategy. Video games have always been looked at as a negative thing, which I think is now a thing of the past. They are an excellent way for children to learn and to communicate with one another through all of the technological advances that the games have made in the past years. If even University level professors are using video games to teach their students, there has to be something good about them, am I right? It is interesting how on the radio program we listened to titled “Studio360 Video Games Radio Program”, there was a little boy who was talking about how he learns so much from video games, and adults don’t really understand the benefits of them like children do. Maybe more adults should start thinking like this professor!
“CEO of Games2Train Marc Prensky predicts the switch from books to games is just around the corner. "Learning and having fun don't have to be separate activities," Prensky said. "They can actually be combined into one activity and since they know that we find that kids are actually asking for this kind of thing to happen." Games are so much more modern, and allow the students to be much more engaged than they can be with books. Not saying that books should be written off completely, because every child needs to learn how to read and enjoy a good book. However, we as a society are advancing so much, so why shouldn’t the way we teach our students advance right along with everything else?
Source: Bellis, Charlotte (2008, May 21st). New Use for Video Games. Retrieved May 22, 2008, from KOMU 8 News Web site: http://www.komu.com/satellite/SatelliteRender/KOMU.com/ba8a4513-c0a8-2f11-0063-9bd94c70b769/0e04ddd8-80ce-0971-003e-d964b2bc332e
Article #2: “PDAs, Video Games, etc. Some Girls Like Their Toys Too”
This article was an interesting one to me when I searched “video games” under the news section of google. This is an article that a woman, Judy Ramsook, wrote about how it used to be that girls would receive quiet toys and boys would receive noisy ones, and how this is changing. “When I was a little girl, one observation I did make was that the toys boys got were more interesting than the ones we had. They had the high tech and or battery powered toy cars, trucks, toy guns, and a range of other playthings that actually made some noise. Those toys the boys had made our tea sets, dolls, doll houses and illustrated books seem boring in comparison. So when some of us girls became bored with the tea set, dolls, or doll houses, we usually placed them in a far corner of the closet and never took a glance at them again. And even though there are many girls out there who may still want the dolls, tea sets and doll houses, there are many of us who may have preferred the high tech, noisy toys too.”
In the “old days”, or so they are called, boys played with “boy toys” such as trucks, trains and planes, and girls played with quiet toys that didn’t make any pretend noises such as dolls and tea sets. Nowadays, it is not uncommon to see a girl with her PlayStation or Game Boy Advance that matches her brother’s. I think the fact that girls are playing video games now too shows the advancement of this art and how crucial and common it is in society today.
I remember being about eight years old, which would make my little brother three at the time, and how my mom bought us both Game Boys for the plane rides to Grandma’s house. Granted, he played Mario Kart and I played Mary-Kate and Ashley games, but still. I wanted one of those toys just as much as he did. Now, being a freshman in college, I have an Xbox in my dorm room because I love playing Guitar Hero. And how did I start playing Guitar Hero, you ask? I learned about the game from one of my girlfriends about a year ago. I think the advancement of video games in that girls want to play them just as much as boys do proves that they are an excellent part of our society, and that they can only grow and become better from here. In the article “Trigger Happy”, the author, Steven Poole says “But one useful lesson is that the video game ecology is one rife with inter-species breeding: the lines between genres are gradually being erased.” (In this article he discussed the origin of video games and the different types of genres throughout the years.) However, although this might seem far-fetched, the idea that the different genres of video games are being pushed together might also prove this point, that video games are an advancing thing of the future as well. Much like everyone starting to play them, all of the topics are starting to be so able to teach people things that they should become more accepted and valued.
Source: Ramsook, Judy (2008, May 22nd). PDAs, Video Games, etc. Some Girls Like Their Toys Too. Retrieved May 23, 2008, from American Chronicle Web site: http://www.americanchronicle.com/articles/62672