Proactive Parents
 
HOME | CONTACT US | SITE MAP

Recent Searches:
Search: Proactive Parents
Search: Parents
Search: Parent Support

Partner Sites:
Web Inceptions, Inc.
Domain Name Sales
Domain Registration Alerts


New Sites:
Supernatural Photography
Bargain Scrapbooks
Challenge Workshop
Virtual Pets
Reconcilable Differences
The Love Bible
Advanced Navigation
PUA
Hyper Seduction
Advanced Defense
Party Confidential
Spice Chefs
Adventure Climbers
Independent Cycling
Organic Parenting
Affordable Beach Living
Coach Promotion
Nightlife Photographer
Affordable Home Broker
Interior Updates
Real Estate Bailout
Serenity Photography
Advanced Exports
Enhanced Photography
Smart Custody
Adventure By Nature
The Wine You Love
Bridal Insight
Inspirational Instruction
Coral Adventures
ProactiveParents.com
Thursday, November 20, 2008


How Kids Learn To Cooperate In Video Games A Guide for Parents and Teachers

How Kids Learn To Cooperate In Video Games -- A Guide for Parents and Teachers by: Marc Prensky A great many parents are concerned that the electronic games their kids play are teaching the kids “negative” messages such as aggression, violence, and isolation from real people. I want to illustrate here how computer and video game playing, can have positive effects on kids. This includes even the “addictive” game playing associated with many of these games. The learning from these games


is well worth the effort the kids put in playing them, and kids typically sense this at some level, which is one reason they fight so hard for their games. One key lesson many of their games is teaching them is the value of people working together and helping each other. To illustrate how this occurs, I will use one particular game, Toontown, as an example. Toontown (www. toontown. com) is the Walt Disney Company’s entry into the Massive Multiplayer Online Role-Playing Game (MMORPG) category. For the non-initiated, that means a computer game that supports thousands of players online simultaneously, all of whom can see and interact with each other. A key feature of these worlds is that they are “persistent,” meaning that the worlds continue to exist and change whether or not you are there, just any other place in the real world. [Note: There are two types of multiplayer online games, both of which have their advantages. One type, the “multiplayer” game, lets you interact with a limited group of people, such as those on your team or squad, in a game world that typically exists for only the time you are playing. The game America’s Army is a good example of this. The second type, the “massively multiplayer” game, lets you interact with everyone you meet in the ongoing world. Massively multiplayer games like EverQuest, Asheron’s Call, and Dark Age of Camelot have captured the time and imaginations of hundreds of thousands of US teenage and older players. The Korean massively multiplayer game Lineage has over 4 million registered users, often with up to half a million players on-line at once. The players typically meet in relatively thinly-populated areas of very large and often interconnected virtual worlds, so even with these huge numbers, it is not like pushing your way through Times Square on New Year’s Eve. ] Toontown is the first massively multiplayer game designed specifically designed for younger kids (pre-teens, I think, though they don’t specifically say. ) In addition, many older kids and even adults enjoy playing it. In the game you create, name and dress a character, and then you take it out to play in the virtual world. Your character is the representation (“avatar”) of you playing in the world – it is the “you” that other players know. Although if you wanted to you could spend your entire time in Toontown merely running around the virtual world, the “object” of the game is to defeat “Cogs,” members of the evil gang that wants to take over the town. The Cogs to fight come in many varieties and strengths. To defeat a Cog you employ “gags”– such as squirt bottles or pies in the face – that you purchase with jelly bean currency that you earn in a number of ways. In your early days in Toontown, when you have earned relatively few gags, you typically run around alone, deciding when to confront a low-level Cog you pass in the street. (You do this by running into it. ) You and the Cog then square off and do battle, taking turns throwing gags at each other. If you defeat the Cog, he explodes and you are rewarded with points towards additional gags. If the Cog defeats you, you “die,” which means you lose all your gags (although, importantly, you do not lose the “experience” you attained – i. e. the types and levels of gags you are allowed to purchase and use. ) There are a lot of other twists, but that’s essentially the game: Earn and buy gags, use them to fight Cogs. But here’s where the cooperative part comes in. As you move to higher experience levels, the tasks you are required to accomplish become more and more difficult. You often have to “rescue” buildings that the Cogs have taken over, buildings that have multiple floors filled with high-level, hard-to-defeat Cogs. And you can’t do this alone, no matter how much experience you have. So you begin to learn to play the game with others. The game encourages this, with “friends lists” and built in “speed chat” menus consisting, for kids’ protection, of a limited number of phrases you can use. For example, you can invite your friends to help you defeat a building (or, if you prefer, you can just wait outside for others to show up. ) But it gets subtle. Just because someone is your friend (or wants to be) or happens to show up, doesn’t mean he or she has the experience to defeat the higher-level Cogs. You can check out someone’s gags when they are in range to help you decide whom to work with, but success depends not only on the level and number of gags one has, but also on knowing how to use them in battle. You learn over time what players you want on your team to achieve success in particular situations. Sometimes, to be sure all of you survive, you have to reject players who ask to work with you on a certain task. One of the things you can say through the speed chat is “I think this is too risky for you. ” Just as in the real world, such advice is not always well-received, and the game gives you the opportunity to learn to deal with this. In the midst of any battle – players typically fight higher-level Cogs in groups of four – a player can choose, rather than to throw a gag at the Cogs, to instead give his or her fellow players additional “laff points” (i. e. health). Doing this helps prevent them from “dying” and dropping out of the battle. One skill typically gained from frequent play is knowing when to help your teammates versus when to attack the Cogs. This is not trivial. One adult player described her first battle with ultra-high-level Cogs as “extremely nerve wracking,” and characterized the strategies she had to employ to work successfully with the other players as “the most emotional experience I’ve ever had in a game. ” And this is the version for kids! And there is yet another way Toontown players learn there is value in cooperation. Some of the tasks available to higher-level players allow them to earn jelly beans by helping out new players. When these experienced players see a Newbie fighting a Cog on the street, they can join in and assist. When the Cog is defeated, both the experienced player and the Newbie get rewarded game at their own level. Is it Boring? Still, while the tasks at the start of the game involve defeating only one Cog at a time and the tasks at higher levels require players to defeat hundreds of Cogs on their way to liberate bigger and bigger buildings, the battles are very similar. “Isn’t that boring?” I asked one “addicted” player. “After all it’s basically the same thing over and over – fighting Cogs. ” “I like going up the levels,” she replied. And of course the only way she can do this is by learning to cooperate well with real people, in real time – while sitting at her own computer. I encourage readers of this article to try Toontown, both with your kids, and even on your own. (You can go to www. toontown. com to get started. ) See how far you can get. If you happen to enjoy the experience, you can go on to the aforementioned “older players’” games, where the enemies are fantasy monsters and the buildings castles to storm, yet where the principles of cooperation are basically the same. If you actually get addicted to cooperative play, don’t blame me – these games are designed to reel you in. But even if you don’t get hooked yourself – and the more you are from the “Digital Immigrant” generation the less likely it is that you will – hopefully you will have learned this important and generally-overlooked lesson: What keeps the kids playing these games is not the violence (that’s all fake and the kids know it), but rather the ability to work together with others to achieve more and more difficult goals. Can you think of any skill more useful for children to spend their time learning? I can’t.

Author:
Marc Prensky

About the Author:
Marc Prensky is an internationally acclaimed speaker, writer, consultant, and designer in the critical areas of education and learning. He is the author of Digital Game-Based Learning (McGraw-Hill, 2001). Marc is founder and CEO of Games2train, a game-based learning company, and founder of The Digital Multiplier, an organization dedicated to eliminating the digital divide in learning worldwide. He is also the creator of the sites and . Marc holds an MBA from Harvard and a Masters in Teaching from Yale. More of his writings can be found at . More of Marc’s writings on the positive effects of video games can be found at www.marcprensky.com/writing/default.asp.marc(at)games2train.com



More great sites:
Showcase Photography | Showcase Records | Show This Home | Show Your Pet | Signature Check | Signature Scan | Silk Traders | Simply Trim | Single Mom | Site Lift | Ski Desk | Slim Guide | Smart Listing | Smile Care Centers | Smile Wizard | Smog Repair | Snorkel guide | Solution Driven | Spa Diet | Spa Repair | Special Baskets | Special Engagement | Specialty Antiques | Spirit Waves | Spontaneously | Spy Networks | SQL Weekly | Startup Financing | Staying Fit | Stock Market Buy | Stock Market Insight | Stock Play | Stop Odor | Surf Guide | Surf Hub | Survey The Web | Systematically | Take My Breath Away | Talking Tutor | Tasteful Gifts | Tasteless Gifts | Tax Domain | Tax Hint | Tax Hit | Tax Lifeline | Tax Low | Tax Medics | Tax Outlook | Tax Rat | Tax Reviewers | Tax Secrets For Wealth | Tax Terms | Tax Time Tips | Tax Tools | Tensions | The Antique Outpost | The Craft Center | The Dolphin Store | The Exit Poll | The Fact Finder | The Home Locator | The Information Technology Experts | The Loan Advisor | The Mudslinger | The Pet Lover | The Photo Source | The Pipe Dream | The Plumbing Experts | The Putt | The Sketchpad | The Smile Factory | The Tax Guide | The Tax Guide | The Tax Lawyer | The Tax Lawyer | The Wireless Experts | The XML Source | Thinking Men | Ticket Outpost | Ticket Outpost |

Do you have a web site? Please link to us!


ProactiveParents.com: How Kids Learn To Cooperate In Video Games A Guide for Parents and Teachers

More Proactive Parents information:

Article: 6 Great Freebie Resources for Parents of Twins & Multiple Births 6 Great Freebie Resources for Parents of Twins & Multiple Births

Article: Home For The Holidays:  Avoid Aging Parents Becoming A Burden Home For The Holidays: Avoid Aging Parents Becoming A Burden

Article: A Parents Guide to Online Gaming, Part 1 A Parents Guide to Online Gaming, Part 1

Article: Navigating in the New World: Parents and Teenagers Growing Together Navigating in the New World: Parents and Teenagers Growing Together

Article: Choosing a Self Defense / Martial Arts School: A Parents Guide Choosing a Self Defense / Martial Arts School: A Parents Guide

Article: Public School Sex-Education Classes  --- Bad News For Parents and Children Public School Sex-Education Classes --- Bad News For Parents and Children

Article: The Laid Back Parents Guide to Teaching Your Child to Read The Laid Back Parents Guide to Teaching Your Child to Read

Article: The Top 10 Fun Things for Parents and Toddlers to Play With The Top 10 Fun Things for Parents and Toddlers to Play With

Article: Busy, Working Parents --- 22 Ways To Homeschool Your Kids Busy, Working Parents --- 22 Ways To Homeschool Your Kids

Article: The Real Problem With Todays Teenagers (And Why Most Parents Just Dont Get It!) The Real Problem With Todays Teenagers (And Why Most Parents Just Dont Get It!)

Article: Caretaking Parents Entitled Kids Caretaking Parents Entitled Kids

Article: A Parents Instruction Manual A Parents Instruction Manual

Article: The ADHD Parents Guide: Questions for the School The ADHD Parents Guide: Questions for the School

Article: How Kids Learn To Cooperate In Video Games A Guide for Parents and Teachers How Kids Learn To Cooperate In Video Games A Guide for Parents and Teachers

Article: Buying Video Games for Kids 101 - A Parents Guide Buying Video Games for Kids 101 - A Parents Guide

Article: A Parents Guide to Online Gaming, Part 2 A Parents Guide to Online Gaming, Part 2

Article: Coping Strategies for Parents Who Have Children with Disabilities Coping Strategies for Parents Who Have Children with Disabilities

Article: Bring the Kids!  A Parents Guide to Stress-Free Travel Bring the Kids! A Parents Guide to Stress-Free Travel

Article: Aging Parents Need Love Too Aging Parents Need Love Too

Article: What Parents Should Do For Children To Do Their Best After Divorce? What Parents Should Do For Children To Do Their Best After Divorce?

Article: Are Today? Parents Ready For Extreme Parenting? Are Today? Parents Ready For Extreme Parenting?

Article: Watch Your Language! - How Parents Can Help Kids Help Themselves Watch Your Language! - How Parents Can Help Kids Help Themselves

Article: Top Ten Things Parents Must Know About State Academic Standards (What Your Child s/b Learning) Top Ten Things Parents Must Know About State Academic Standards (What Your Child s/b Learning)

Article: The Ten Things That Successful Parents Do The Ten Things That Successful Parents Do

Article: Eight Out Of 10 Kids In Child Safety Seats Are At Risk: And Their Parents DonT Even Realize It Eight Out Of 10 Kids In Child Safety Seats Are At Risk: And Their Parents DonT Even Realize It


Proactive Parents
Parents Parent Support

Related Items:
Reasonable Times
Parents Association
Parents Raise
Neighbor Child
School Permission
Parent Moves
Immature Child
Overindulgent Parents
Parenthood
U S Supreme Court
Proud Parents
Black Child
Legal Parent
Jessica O
Residential Parent
Pacific Support
Ohio Shared Parenting
Pariah
Paris 2001
Child Support Arrearages
Parent Partners
Klearaction
Lesbian Parents
Parent Chat
Repairing Lotion
Parents As Teachers
Split Custody
Proactive Revitalizing
Does Proactive Really Work
Family
Parents Guide
Getting Custody
Proactiv Deep
Biological Parents
Parents Magazine
Second Parent Adoption
Black Parenting
Proactiv Repairing
Help
Children
Advice
Twins
Proactive
Birth Certificate
Parental Control
Working Parents
New Parents
Child Support Enforcement
Adoptive Parents
Gauchos
Parenting Tips
Physical Custody
Divorced Parents
Parents Help
Step Parents
Divorce Court
Parenting Magazine
Florida Divorce
Proactiv Solution
Proactive Acne
Pro Activ
Facial Cleansers
Help For Parents
Parenting Child
Parenting Message Boards
Proactive Solution
Custody Battles
Children And Divorce
Proactive Acne Treatment
Child Counseling
Proactive Skin
Divorce Agreement
Proactive Skin Care
Acne Complex
Acne Cleanser
Dallas Divorce
Child Support Visitation
Proactive Acne Solution
Gas Trimmer
Www Proactiv
Proactive Review
Proactive Care
Renewing Cleanser
Parenting Adhd Children
Obesity In Child
Adhd Parents
Divorce Law Missouri
Proactiv Product
Proactive Cleanser
Proactive Com
Proactive Toner
Best Cure For Acne
Proactiv Makeup
Proactiv Lot
Proactiv Extra Strength
Proactiv Store
Plano Divorce Lawyer
Child Support Joint Custody
San Antonio Divorce Attorney

 
Copyright © 2000-2006 ProactiveParents.com. All Rights Reserved.
Home | Contact Us | About Us | Site Map | Add URL