Learning Game Classification and Development

From Ideaspace Wiki
Jump to: navigation, search


The New Brunswick Community College – Centre for Applied Research in Mobile & Ubiquitous Computing

Main Page



The NBCC Mobile First Technology initiative has been studying state-of-the-art game design development methods and design heuristics, and attempting to identify design characteristics common to successful K-12 educational games for mobile platforms.

Research topics

game design heuristics, learning games, mobile games


MFTI became involved in applied research activities relating to the development of learning games, both independently and with industrial partners. This project is part of an ongoing process with partner First Mobile Education to accomplish the following:

  • Identify critical factors in current game design concepts that have are novel and have been shown to be educationally effective, and commercially successful; and
  • Provide a well-defined process and guidelines for designing and implementing educational games.

This work was motivated by the notion that game development should not be carried out in an ad hoc given several realities:

  • The maturity of the field of game design;
  • The critical nature of design in the educational domain; and
  • The resource constraints of the Mobile First Technology Initiative (MFTI) and the small and medium-sized enterprises with which it is collaborating.

The key findings of our work in this area thus far are as follows:

  • Games seem to be distributed across a variety of learning objectives as classified by the Revised Bloom Taxonomy.
  • Multi-player games seem to be under-represented in the learning games category as classified by the Lecture Games Taxonomy.
  • A more formal survey of games must be undertaken. There appear to be inconsistencies between our classifications using the Lecture Games and Revised Bloom Taxonomies.

Nbcc ca mobi diag-objectives.png


Other information

  • W. McIver Jr., Learning Game Development For The Mobile First Technology Initiative: A Preliminary Study Of Methods, Processes, Heuristics, And Market Opportunities, New Brunswick Community College – Mobile First Technology initiative, Working Paper, 2016-07-12 [PDF]

NBCC Team

  • William McIver Jr., Ph.D., NSERC Industrial Research Chair in Mobile First Technology, Principal Investigator
  • Matthew McArthur, Research Technician & NBCC Alumnus
  • Kevin Gallant, Instructor, NBCC Miramichi

Client–Collaborators

  • Gary Stairs, CEO, First Mobile Education, Fredericton, New Brunswick

Funders

  • Government of New Brunswick – Industry Innovation Challenge (Multi-Channel Content Access Platform project)
  • New Brunswick Innovation Foundation – Research Technician Initiative
  • National Sciences and Engineering Research Council - Industrial Research Chair for Colleges


Contact

William McIver Jr., Ph.D.
NSERC Industrial Research Chair in Mobile & Ubiquitous Computing
Centre for Applied Research in Mobile & Ubiquitous Computing
New Brunswick Community College

Centre for Applied Research in Mobile & Ubiquitous Computing URL: http://wiki.nbcc.mobi
E-mail: bill.mciver@nbcc.ca
Twitter: @mciverNBCC
Blog: http://mciver.mobi/

New Brunswick Community College URL: http://nbcc.ca
Media inquiries

Intranet nbcc mobi carmuc logo.png | © Copyright 2017 - 2022. All Rights Reserved.
The New Brunswick Community College – Centre for Applied Research in Mobile & Ubiquitous Computing is supported by
the Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada. Nbcc ca mobi logo nserc.png