Friday, June 19, 2015

Take a ride down the Oregon



In selecting our educational online game, we reviewed 3 different websites before we decided on the game, The Oregon Trail. This essay will discuss the rubric, how the game can be used in my content area, and the interactive tools that we found useful as a group.

When designing the rubric, we looked at what was important in an educational game if we were to use it in our lesson. As a group our average score was 12.25. However, when we individually rated the game, I scored the game an 11, the lowest in my group. Although the game is very educational, I believe the students in my class will find that the graphics are outdated, may get bored quickly, and find some of the terms in the game difficult to understand. There were also no accommodations for our students who may need it.

Although this game is best used in the Social Studies content area according to commonsense media review page, I can also use it for my content area, Language Arts. This game can be useful for students in middle to high school by engaging them with multifaceted texts for difficult text-based analyses (Common Sense Media, 2015). It can also be used to help students build their vocabulary. As a teacher we can incorporate additional requirements before the student is able to move on. For example, if the student does not understand a specific term in the game, they must stop the game and define the word before they can move on.

When working on this project my approach was different. Instead of using Google like I normally do as my search engine, I decided to use dogpile.com and kidsrex.org. Instead of using Excel from Microsoft office, I used Google sheets, which was the most helpful tool for collaborating with my team.  Finally, we used Emaze for our presentation, which was fantastic and very user friendly.   

Although, educational games is a great way to engage our students, according to teach hub.com “With so many demands placed on educators to always be ‘standards-focused,’ game can seem like more of a distraction than an instructional tool (especially to principals passing by).  I know many teachers who shy away from games completely because they don’t want their principal to walk in and say, “Umm, Mrs. Pak, why are your students playing around instead of learning (Teach Hub, 2015)?” 



References:


Engaging Classroom Games For All Ages retrieved: June 17, 2015


Common Sense Media, retrieved on June 17, 2015


Mecc.(1990)The Oregon Trail Game
https://archive.org/details/msdos_Oregon_Trail_The_1990



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