欢迎来到新航道官网!新航道-用心用情用力做教育!
400-9999-013

首页>雅思>雅思辅导>雅思阅读素材:Game lessons

雅思阅读素材:Game lessons

来源:新航道 浏览:0 发布日期:2012-10-31 09:43

返回列表

 

  雅思阅读素材:Game lessons

 

  It sounds like a cop-out, but the future of schooling may lie with video games

 

  SINCE the beginning of mass education, schools have relied on what is known in educational circles as "chalk and talk". Chalk and blackboard may sometimes be replaced by felt-tip pens and a whiteboard, and electronics in the form of computers may sometimes be bolted on, but the idea of a pedagogue leading his pupils more or less willingly through a day based on periods of study of recognisable academic disciplines, such as mathematics, physics, history, geography and whatever the local language happens to be, has rarely been abandoned.

 

  Abandoning it, though, is what Katie Salen hopes to do. Ms Salen is a games designer and a professor of design and technology at Parsons The New School for Design, in New York. She is also the moving spirit behind Quest to Learn, a new, taxpayer-funded school in that city which is about to open its doors to pupils who will never suffer the indignity of snoring through double French but will, rather, spend their entire days playing games.

 

  Quest to Learn draws on many roots. One is the research of James Gee of the University of Wisconsin. In 2003 Dr Gee published a book called "What Video Games Have to Teach Us About Learning and Literacy", in which he argued that playing such games helps people develop a sense of identity, grasp meaning, learn to follow commands and even pick role models. Another is the MacArthur Foundation's digital media and learning initiative, which began in 2006 and which has acted as a test-bed for some of Ms Salen's ideas about educational-games design. A third is the success of the Bank Street School for Children, an independent primary school in New York that practises what its parent, the nearby Bank Street College of Education, preaches in the way of interdisciplinary teaching methods and the encouragement of pupil collaboration.

 

  Ms Salen is, in effect, seeking to mechanise Bank Street's methods by transferring much of the pedagogic effort from the teachers themselves (who will now act in an advisory role) to a set of video games that she and her colleagues have devised. Instead of chalk and talk, children learn by doing—and do so in a way that tears up the usual subject-based curriculum altogether.

 

  Periods of maths, science, history and so on are no more. Quest to Learn's school day will, rather, be divided into four 90-minute blocks devoted to the study of "domains". Such domains include Codeworlds (a combination of mathematics and English), Being, Space and Place (English and social studies), The Way Things Work (maths and science) and Sports for the Mind (game design and digital literacy). Each domain concludes with a two-week examination called a "Boss Level"—a common phrase in video-game parlance.

 

  Freeing the helots

 

  In one of the units of Being, Space and Place, for example, pupils take on the role of an ancient Spartan who has to assess Athenian strengths and recommend a course of action. In doing so, they learn bits of history, geography and public policy. In a unit of The Way Things Work, they try to inhabit the minds of scientists devising a pathway for a beam of light to reach a target. This lesson touches on maths, optics—and, the organisers hope, creative thinking and teamwork. Another Way-Things-Work unit asks pupils to imagine they are pyramid-builders in ancient Egypt. This means learning about maths and engineering, and something about the country's religion and geography.

 

  Whether things will work the way Ms Salen hopes will, itself, take a few years to find out. The school plans to admit pupils at the age of 12 and keep them until they are 18, so the first batch will not leave until 2016. If it fails, traditionalists will no doubt scoff at the idea that teaching through playing games was ever seriously entertained. If it succeeds, though, it will provide a model that could make chalk and talk redundant. And it will have shown that in education, as in other fields of activity, it is not enough just to apply new technologies to existing processes—for maximum effect you have to apply them in new and imaginative ways.

 

阅读调查

阅读文本, 您觉得有帮助吗?

您需要内部讲义资料吗?

您最近有出国留学的打算吗?

您的姓名
您的电话
提交获取帮助

雅思辅导课程中心

查看更多 >
  • 雅思入门6分班(AB) 高中英语成绩100分以上,雅思... 108小时 13800 在线咨询
  • 雅思精品6分班(B) 高中英语成绩100分以上,雅思... 72小时 11800 在线咨询
  • 雅思入门6分班(AB) 高中英语成绩100分以上,雅思... 108小时 5680 在线咨询
  • 雅思精品6分班(B) 高中英语成绩100分以上,雅思... 72小时 4380 在线咨询
  • 雅思入门6.5-7分魔鬼练题班(ABCD) 228小时 27800 在线咨询
  • 雅思精品6.5-7分魔鬼练题班(BCD) 192小时 25800 在线咨询

雅思快讯

  • 2022-33-14
  • 2022-33-14
  • 2022-33-14
  • 2022-30-14
  • 2022-30-14

雅思经验分享

新航道福州校区雅思老师团队
免费电话