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I was contacted one day by Marco Visscher, a
writer with the European magazine Ode who had read my video game article in
Life Learning magazine. He said he was interested in interviewing me for
their "One Last Thing" column which appears, not surprisingly, on the last
page of each issue.
I agreed and we arranged a time for him to call to conduct the interview.
He also arranged for a local photographer to call me and set up a photo
shoot at my home. It was a whirlwind few days while I did the interview,
gave him some feedback on his notes, and arranged and completed the photo
shoot. But it was a fun experience!
He was interested in using the school angle, versus just talking about
learning through video games, but I figured at least it was a way to start
spreading the concept.
English is not his first language, but he did reasonably well. And I wish
they had chosen one of the pictures with the kids. Oh well.
What is the educational value of Vice Craft, Deus X and other video games?
"All skills that schools are trying to teach children, my son encounters
in the video games he's playing. Reading, math, doing research, social interaction.
It's a great way of learning because children are gaining their knowledge
participating in activities they enjoy, which is hardly the case in a
classroom. Gaming helps children learn how to learn."
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... And how to fight.
"My experience is that children are perfectly capable of understanding that
the violence in games is fantasy. When children are free to choose the games
they play, they choose the level of violence they're comfortable with. My
son doesn't like games with a lot of violence, so he chooses to play other
games. But if he did, I wouldn't worry too much, because I'm involved in his
gamingplaying the games he plays so we can discuss them."
Isn't gaming anti-social?
"Gaming is not just sitting in a corner, staring at your device. Children
sit down with others to play. In some games you choose how characters
interact with each other, so you'll learn how people respond to certain
behaviour. And then there's online gaming, through which children can learn
how to communicate with othersand that's exactly the same interaction
they would get if it had been a face-to-face encounter."
What do kids learn from video games that they don't learn in school?
"You know, schools tend to make things easier and split everything up in tiny
particles, thinking children will learn faster. But I believe it has lost
all meaning to them because it no longer relates to the real world. In video
games you see a whole new big and complex world being created, and many
children enjoy being challenged in this way. Therefore, game designers are
making their games more and more complex every timeit's just what
children want."
So, should video games become part of a school's curriculum?
"I wouldn't go that far. I believe children learn quickly, happily and almost
effortlessly when they are enjoying what they're doingbut not everyone
enjoys playing video games. Instead of limiting the playing time your
children spend on video games, you could engage them more and support their
interest. Just because children learn skills through video games doesn't
make them less relevant."
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