• Home
  • ABOUT
  • Knowledge Base
    • About Writing
    • Content-Area Literacy
    • Digital Learning
    • English Learners
    • Equity & Access
    • Leading Professional Learning
    • Program Design
    • Teacher as Writer
    • Teacher Inquiry
  • Blog
    • Events & Opportunities
    • NWP Radio
    • Marginal Syllabus
  • Books
  • Contact
  • NWP.org
  • Home
  • ABOUT
  • Knowledge Base
    • About Writing
    • Content-Area Literacy
    • Digital Learning
    • English Learners
    • Equity & Access
    • Leading Professional Learning
    • Program Design
    • Teacher as Writer
    • Teacher Inquiry
  • Blog
    • Events & Opportunities
    • NWP Radio
    • Marginal Syllabus
  • Books
  • Contact
  • NWP.org

Tech Tools for Teachers, by Teachers: Video Game Design in the Classroom

44 views 0

Author: Greg Kehring

Summary: What can the writing process teach students and teachers about video game design, and how can game design expand our understanding of writing genres? Read about this middle school teacher who used Gamestar Mechanic to engage his students in digital writing and connected learning. From creation to peer revision and, finally, publication on a gaming website where others played the games and offered feedback, he and his students discovered the power that technology can have in understanding composing and creative processes and providing new avenues for writing. For teachers who are reluctant to engage in digital work (or who are ready to take some new steps), this article can provide encouragement, guidance, and testimony about how students learn and respond to such experiences.

Original Date of Publication: 2011


Excerpt

Download “Tech Tools for Teachers, by Teachers: Video Game Design in the Classroom”

I found the answer I was looking for when I attended a session at the National Writing Project’s National Meeting in 2010. The presenter of this session was Alan Gershenfeld, the founder and President of E-Line Media. He introduced video game design as a genre of digital literacy and I was instantly amazed at the possibilities of this concept. Gershenfeld showed me a writing genre that used the conventional writing process, collaboration, problem solving, and critical thinking in an engaging and innovative way. I saw many learning opportunities that would involve the use of game design; including some very cool possibilities for writing in the content areas. Mr. Gershenfeld introduced Gamestar Mechanic, the game design platform that he helped to create. He was proposing that teachers should use video games, and game design, as an instructional tool and I was totally on board.


Related Resources

  • The State of Student Technology: A Webcomic Analysis
  • Curriculum Rewired: Teachers and Students Come Together Around Innovative New Pedagogy
  • Students Tell Their Stories Digitally
  • Breaking the Boundaries of Texts: Video Game and Literacy Curriculum Development for English Language Learners
  • Using Twitter in Classrooms and for Professional Development

Original Source: National Writing Project, https://www.nwp.org/cs/public/print/resource/3742

Tags:middle/high schooltechnologypublicationconnected learningmultimodalwriting processonline learning

Would you recommend this resource to others?

Yes  No
ABOUT

write.learn.lead. is a collection of resources, insights, and reflections from National Writing Project teacher-leaders. You can also find us at nwp.org and Educator Innovator.

SEARCH BY TAG
agenda assessment bibliography bilingual/bicultural coaching community connected learning continuity curriculum diversity dual language elementary facilitation family grammar/correctness key reading mentor/thinking partner middle/high school multimodal narrative new teachers partnership preservice professional growth protocol publication reading/writing connection research retreat revision rural school-year program science/math social justice social studies standards study group summer program technology urban video writing center writing group writing prompt youth program
NWP Logo
NWP ON THE WEB
NWP.org
Educator Innovator
The Current
STAY CONNECTED WITH NWP
Get more great resources on teaching and writing delivered to your inbox every month by subscribing to our Write Now Newsletter.
  • © 2020 National Writing Project. All Rights Reserved. Privacy Policy | Terms of Use