We are on TV! For this year’s game modding class (CI498N), I have decided to use Neverwinter Nights 2. Even though the game is more demanding on the hardware (one student ended up dropping the class because the laptop she purchased would not run the game). But overall, the class went very well, and the resources I gathered was sufficient to run the class. This has become my favorite class…

Our Video game class made it to Heartland News this evening! You can see some of my students in the video clips. [Check out the video feed (video feed no longer available, Nov 2007)]

Teacher Mod Squad
Teachers Mod Squad: JaeHwan Byun, Brian Murley (Giant City School), and me

Video games teach kids in the classroom

Arnold Wyrick (July 6, 2007, 06:55 PM)

CARBONDALE, Ill. - The video gaming industry outsells movies in Hollywood. Now a professor at Southern Illinois University in Carbondale is trying to tap into the gaming craze by using video games to teach kids math, science and their A-B-C’s.”This is the gaming generation that has grown up playing games. Even the teachers themselves have grown up playing games. The idea of using video gaming is more acceptable to them,” said Dr. Christian Loh, assistant professor of Instructional Design and Technology at SIU.

His students are learning how to take a simply video game and incorporate learning tutorials for virtually any subject.

“If you can have the teaching material presented in a video format they will be more interested to try them out. Rather than sitting in a class and watching a Powerpoint presentation or a lesson on a dry erase board,” Dr. Loh said.

And as often as kids these days go online or turn on their X-boxes and PlayStations to play a video game in a virtual world, that world may soon become a real world teaching them in the classroom.

“Much more research is needed on this matter,” said Loh. “But we are hoping that with more research into video games that it could be used more efficiently in school and in learning. And that we’ll be able to ‘recapture education.’”

It’s a quest that Dr. Loh and his students at SIU are already on. Dr. Loh is working on developing a college class for a degree in video gaming programming.

[N.B. There is only one thing I would change: Dr. Loh is working on developing a college class for a degree in video gaming programing degree program with Instructional Gaming minor.]