Like many of you, I am always looking for a new tool to place in my teacher toolbox, something that will help me reach each of my students more effectively. However, we see trends come and go as educators, and often we see strategies repackaged and given a new name. So when I began hearing things like “gamification” and “gaming in the classroom,” I was skeptical at first. My mind was filled with images of students spending hours in front of screens with little reaction to those living in our three-dimensional world.
I would not call myself a gamer. Sure, I enjoy playing games—digital and otherwise—but I have learned how easily one can get sucked into them. I asked myself, does this “new” idea have merit? Will it support my students’ learning goals, give them a voice, and help them make the world a better place?
With that skepticism in mind, I began attending gaming sessions at conferences, reading articles and blogs, and engaging with other educators through social media to learn more. I heard about complex systems of badges and rewards in addition to detailed directions for student-designed video games. Although hearing about how this was working for other teachers was impressive, I, like many of my colleagues, was failing to see the connection between these ideas and the practicality of my middle school classroom. I wondered how bringing gaming into my classroom would support student learning.
Then, in an Edcamp session facilitated by Laren Hammonds, I learned that by taking the principles that make a game exciting for players and translating them into classroom practice, a teacher can foster an environment where students are engaged. Does this include a teacher or student using games to support learning? Yes, sometimes. Does this include students creating games to prove mastery of standards? It absolutely can.
Here are a few practices that game makers use that translate well into classroom practices. My bet is that you are already using most of these with your students.
Competition
Many of our students thrive on competition. In our sixth-grade classroom, my male students tend to work much harder when there is a competition in place, even for something as small as bragging rights. For some of our students, competition is the way to reach them and get them to connect with our content. It can help to build relationships among team members, and it teaches them a valuable life lesson: how to win or lose gracefully.
Challenge
Like with any task, if you make it too easy, the audience will lose interest. We want our students, the next generation, to have the opportunity to fail, learn from their failures, make new plans, grow, and work toward success. Yes, our students need our support and their peers’ support along the way. This not only engages them in a growth mind-set, but also helps to build a strong work ethic. They become stronger, self-motivated, and more independent.
Communication
Our students are no longer dying of dysentery on the Oregon Trail. Today’s games include connecting with others in real time. Our learners need that opportunity. Today’s learners expect to be able to get timely feedback. They crave the opportunity to have real-time sessions to discuss, analyze, plan, and strategize their next move. They write, speak, listen, and learn about putting all of their literacy lessons into practice in a meaningful manner with an authentic audience.
Camaraderie
Our students want to belong. In today’s games, they have the opportunity to build teams, chat with others, and learn from one another. In our classrooms, we have the opportunity to provide our learners with opportunities to collaborate, both face-to-face and through digital tools. Our students want to feel that they belong to something bigger than themselves. And isn’t that what we want our classrooms to be—a safe environment that includes and supports everyone?
Do all of these strategies work with all students? Not more than any other strategy. However, games have been around for centuries. To dismiss them would be to deprive our students of rich learning opportunities.
With this in mind, I may be a gamer after all. How about you?
Julie D. Ramsay is a National Board Certified Teacher and the author of “Can We Skip Lunch and Keep Writing?”: Collaborating in Class and Online, Grades 3–8.She teaches ELA to sixth graders at Rock Quarry Middle School in Tuscaloosa, AL. She also travels the country to speak, present, and facilitate workshops in applying technology to support authentic learning. Read her blog, eduflections.