George Lucas Educational Foundation
Game-Based Learning

Unlocking Learning Mastery

Reconsidering the rules of the game

June 14, 2012

Agreeing on how to best establish what a learner understands isn't simple -- if for no other reason than understanding isn't simple.

Gamification is one response. By embedding diverse achievements into activities and assessments, learning progress can be refracted infinitely. These systems would be able to more flexibly respond to unique learner pathways and abilities, and would further serve as encouragement mechanics -- instead of one carrot stick, there are hundreds. And not just carrots, but every fruit and vegetable imaginable.

But video games have even more to offer formal learning systems. Lots more.While what actually constitutes a video game is changing with emerging technologies, in these digital playgrounds progress is usually iterative and requires players to demonstrate proficiency in certain areas.To be able to do this before moving on to that.

Stifling the Fun

Hated tropes in video game mechanics include "training" sessions, where players must prove to the video game that they can perform a basic function before moving on. Turn left, turn right, jump, pick up an object, open a map, etc. While a basic proving ground doesn't sound bad in theory, it stifles fun because it destroys the players' own sense of pace, interest and curiosity. It is a stern reminder that you are playing a game, that the game is in control, and you're only along for the ride, which dissolves immersion as well.Not much different than school, then.Most game designers have learned, however. Mandatory training sessions and even unskippable cut scenes -- breaks in play that force players to watch videos that may or may not be integral to the game -- are less frequent than they were two years ago. They've also evolved unlocking.By performing tasks -- as minor as opening a treasure chest, or as significant as completing a level -- new "things" are unlocked: new areas, new weapons, new characters, new abilities and so on. These mechanics serve to encourage the player, because to move forward, items need to be checked off -- in a manner that is not only visible, but that rewards play, experimentation, and curiosity.And in contrast to the aforementioned mandatory training session, they are incremental, intermittent, often voluntary and reward players immediately.Climb a mountain. Bam. New sword, proceeding level unlocked, game progress percentage blinks on screen.Immediate, visible and necessary before moving on.

Takeaways for Learning

So what's this have to do with school? A lot, actually.While there is no single way "school is," there are general patterns that reward compliance, thoroughness and punctuality while stifling learner-centeredness, abstraction, and play.What would happen if a student was required to unlock the next assignment in a project-based learning environment? In light of students demonstrating irregular progress rates -- especially in middle school -- holding a student back because they are struggling with an idea doesn't make sense.But video games don't do that. While the player "struggles" -- i.e., builds fluency with a skill or idea -- game designers let the player continue to play. To learn. To have skills modeled.To be inspired.Game designers learned to give the game back to the players so they could unlock their own experiences -- and inspire the game designers to boot with their ideas.

Conclusion

Essentially the matter at hand here is personalized learning. Allowing users to proceed at their own pace, to play with ideas and content, and to gain a variety of achievements beyond those educators insist upon.Learning is very much a game. It has rules, rewards, and should be amendable to suit the goals and natural gifts of the learner.Video games have been forced to change from their linear, closed-ended approach because they are essentially small businesses, and in any business that isn't reaching certain profit levels, there is no guarantee of future games.But for learning environments, the potential loss is much greater. And so they must at least match this kind of evolution by putting students first, and adapting the game to them. One way of doing so is offering diverse pathways through content to unlock, and offering equally diverse rewards for said unlocking.And this means handing over the keys.

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