The politics of gaming in schools: a sociocultural perspective from Western Australia |
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Authors: | Frank Bate Jean MacNish Steven Males |
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Affiliation: | 1. School of Medicine, University of Notre Dame Australia, Fremantle, Australia;2. School of Education, University of Notre Dame Australia, Fremantle, Australia |
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Abstract: | This paper discusses gaming in a Western Australian school for boys. The overriding ethos of the school is supportive of the potential of ICT to better engage students and deliver enhanced educational outcomes. The school sees game-based design as at the vanguard of innovation, but also accepts its important duty of care responsibilities. Tensions were revealed between the opportunities presented by educational gaming and the perceived problem of managing student distraction, particularly the tendency for students to spend large amounts of time playing games that have little or no educational value. The paper describes the forms of gaming that emerged at the school, considering both their educational impact and propensity to detract from students' opportunities to learn. It is argued that the perceived benefits and risks of gaming are not well understood, and that powerful political forces are at play which shape school policy, teachers' pedagogy, parent perceptions and student actions. |
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Keywords: | gaming serious games simulations computer games computer distraction 1:1 laptop implementation |
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