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Stefan Kucharczyk; Kenneth Pettersen; Jennifer Rowsell – Qualitative Research Journal, 2025
Purpose: This short article takes the play and passion of children's literacy as its focal point. Rather than orienting reading and writing around what should be taught or how children should respond and understand written text, in this short reflective essay we aim to explore the play and passion inherent in children's literacy practices. We do…
Descriptors: Play, Literacy, Early Childhood Education, Family Environment
Picton, Irene; Clark, Christina; Judge, Tim – National Literacy Trust, 2020
Video games are a significant cultural and creative force, often involving a number of art forms, including narrative, design and audio composition. They have been the subject of a large-scale exhibition at the Victoria and Albert museums in London and Dundee, while the British Games Institute (BGI) was set up to support video game culture in…
Descriptors: Video Games, Adolescents, Preadolescents, Foreign Countries
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Iacovides, Ioanna; Aczel, James; Scanlon, Eileen; Taylor, Josie; Woods, Will – International Journal of Virtual and Personal Learning Environments, 2011
Digital games can be powerful learning environments because they encourage active learning and participation within "affinity groups" (Gee, 2004). However, the use of games in formal educational environments is not always successful (O'Neil et al., 2005). There is a need to update existing theories of motivation and engagement in order…
Descriptors: Educational Technology, Technology Uses in Education, Learner Engagement, Informal Education
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Doyle, Denise – Learning, Media and Technology, 2010
The "Immersed in Learning" project began in 2007 to evaluate the use of 3D virtual worlds as a teaching and learning tool in undergraduate programmes in digital media at the University of Wolverhampton, UK. A question that the research set out to explore was what were the benefits of integrating 3D immersive learning with face-to-face…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Evaluation Methods, Computer Simulation, Teaching Methods
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Pelletier, Caroline; Burn, Andrew; Buckingham, David – E-Learning and Digital Media, 2010
This article addresses practices of textual appropriation in computer games made by young people. By focusing on how young people's production work makes reference to popular media texts, it examines the basis on which such work claims to be legible as a game text: how it claims to be literate in the context of an after-school game-making club.…
Descriptors: Creativity, Journalism Education, Popular Culture, Media Literacy
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Ip, Barry; Jacobs, Gabriel; Watkins, Alan – Australasian Journal of Educational Technology, 2008
There are numerous claims that playing computer and video games may be educationally beneficial, but there has been little formal investigation into whether or not the frequency of exposure to such games actually affects academic performance. This paper explores the issue by analysing the relationships between gaming frequency--measured as the…
Descriptors: Undergraduate Students, Video Games, Academic Achievement, Program Effectiveness
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Ip, Barry; Capey, Martin; Baker, Andrew; Carroll, John – Australasian Journal of Educational Technology, 2009
This paper explores a relatively new area in the design and development of assessment procedures for the evaluation of coursework and student performance on computer and video games degrees. Emphasis is placed on an assessment which involves the development of and interaction in a virtual world, where lecturers and students are represented as…
Descriptors: Student Evaluation, Video Games, Virtual Classrooms, Computers
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Pelletier, Caroline – E-Learning, 2005
Digital or computer games have recently attracted the interest of education researchers and policy-makers for two main reasons: their interactivity, which is said to allow greater agency, and their inherent pleasures, which are linked to increased motivation to learn. However, the relationship between pleasure, agency and motivation in educational…
Descriptors: Play, Educational Games, Learning Motivation, Educational Technology