Leanna Prater - Can You Create A Game?: Rethinking Student Assessment

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Leanna Prater Fayette County Public Schools Lexington, KY “You mean this game is my grade?”

Transcript of Leanna Prater - Can You Create A Game?: Rethinking Student Assessment

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Leanna Prater Fayette County Public Schools

Lexington, KY

“You mean this game is my grade?”

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Our Students

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Occupational Activities of

Children

PlayingThinkingLearning

Seymour Papert

Papert, S. (1980). Teaching children thinking. In R. Taylor (Ed.), The computer in school: Tutor, tool, tutee (pp. 161-176). New York, NY: Teachers College Press .

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21st CenturySkills Needed

• think critically• solve problems creatively

• innovate• collaborate• communicate

Computational Thinking is a skill everyone needs for life and work in the digital age

Today

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What’s in a Game

• A Story, characters, setting• Player Goals• Problems to solve• Scaffolds• Score• Animation• Rewards• Ability to keeping trying• Play with a friend or a team

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What’s in a Game

• A Story, characters, setting• Player Goals• Problems to solve• Scaffolds• Interactive• Score• Animation• Rewards• Ability to keeping trying• Play with a friend or a team

Narrative Writing

Calculating

DemonstrationOf Knowledge

Create or Build a Model

Performance

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Looking at Assessment

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Previous Work:Children as Game

Designers

Yasmin KafaiIdit Harel

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Design Needed to Be….

• Replicable• Fit within time constraints• Cross –curricular• Closely tied to standards• Sustainable

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Framework: Based on Theory

ConstructivismPiaget

ConstructionismPapert

Social ConstructivismVygotsky

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Create a Challenge Using Substitution Model

Assess standard with extended response

Assess standard by asking students to calculate a math problem

Assess standard by asking students to create a model

Games have narrative structure, characters, setting, plots

Games have scoreCharacters move

Games could involve a digital model that is interactive, player goal

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The Task

ConstraintsBrainstorm and Planning

Testing and Debugging (real audience)Reflection

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CAN YOU CREATE A SCRATCH GAME?

Can you make a game with the following conditions?• Correctly use a geosphere and a hydrosphere. • Explain with words or pictures how the geosphere and hydrosphere

interact. • Have at least one background change• Character must move within the program• Player can interact with the game.

5-ESS2-1 Develop a model using an example to describe ways the geosphere, biosphere, hydrosphere, and/or atmosphere interact.

Constraints

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Brainstorm your game or story:• Think about the systems you will use. • Select backgrounds and sprites to match your

systems.• How will players interact with your program?• What is the goal of the game?

Brainstorm and Planning

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Create your program on the computer.• Test it out, does it work?• Have a friend play. Did it work for them? If not, why?• Go back and fix your program and try again.

Testing and Debugging

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Think: How could you have improved your game?

Reflection

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The Process

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Authentic Instruction• Task – Student Centered, real-world relevant• Process- Sustained investigation, multiple

interpretation/outcomes• Environment- Learning takes place in

collaborative groups, over time• Teacher - coach/facilitator• Product - designed for a real audience• Assessment- authentic, integrated, leads to life-

long learning.Callison & Lamb, 2004; Herrington, Oliver, & Reeves, 2003; Lombardi, 2007; Maina, 2004;

Renzulli, Gentry, & Reis, 2004; Means & Olson, 1994

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Total time with students: 50-55 minute class period30-35 days a year

3 elementary STEM lab teachers3 suburban elementary schools

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• Various Access to Technology

• Teachers reported all students came with some game play experience

Diverse Student Populations

School 1: Houses Deaf/Hard Hearing ClusterSchool 2: over 30 different nationalities, 16% ESLSchool 3: 67% students receive free/reduced lunch

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Instructional Design

http://www.bscs.org/bscs-5e-instructional-modelBiological Sciences Curriculum Study

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The Work

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Examples

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Assessment

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Assessment of Learning TargetsScore0 = No Evidence1 = some evidence2 = strong evidence

 

Name:___________________________ Date of Target Check_______

NOTES

Did the student correctly write decimals to the thousandths place? 0 1 2

 

Did the student correctly use the “>” symbol to compare decimals to the thousandths place?

0 1 2

 

Did the student correctly use the “<” symbol tocompare decimals to the thousandths place?

0 1 2

 

Did the student correctly use the “=” symbol to compare decimals to the thousandths place?

0 1 2

 

Did the student correctly read the decimals in the game they created?

0 1 2

 

Assessment of Game Design    

Player could not win game by simply guessing 0 1 2

 

Game incorporated “>“, “<“, and “=“ symbols 0 1 2

 

Goals and rules of the game were clear 0 1 2

 

Graphics were appealing and added to the game 0 1 2

 

Information in the game was accurate 0 1 2

 

A peer successfully played the game 0 1 2

 

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Project Rubric

Scale: 0 = not attempted 1= attempted 2= met requirements 3= exceeds requirements

Requirements Points Earned

Use a control to begin the game

Use a code to create a secret word

Create a code to allow a player to hear each letter in your secret word or phrase

Use “Ask and Answer” to make the game interactive with a player.

Total Points

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What We’re Learning

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Students asGame Designers=

Evolved to

Students as:Game Designers

Story MakersArtists

Programmers

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Leveling the Playing Field for Kids

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Playtesting is important.

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Many kids felt like a “game designer”.

“Game designers mess up sometimes, and I messed up a couple of times.”

“It was our idea completely. So we made it the way we wanted to.”

“I was making something I could play.”

“I did feel like a game designer in a way because you got to make lots of choices on how you wanted it to be.”

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Those who didn’t…...

“Game designers make games for years.”

“It is not going to get popular or heard of.”

“Felt like regular 4th grade.”

“It was an assignment, not a choice.”

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Shared Knowledge.

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Role of the teacher

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Developing Computational ThinkingSkills, Vocabulary and Content

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Teacher needs for new technologies, including game based learning.

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Intellectual Partnerships

“I’ve never felt more valued as an educator.”

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Building a Community

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Let’s Meet UP!New York, NY Cambridge, MA

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Resources

Blogs.fcps.net/createagame

Leanna PraterFayette County Schools

Dr. Joan MazurUniversity of KY

Thanks!