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This presentation was given at Great Ormond Street Hospital's Learning Innovation Day 2013. It briefly covers the nature of games for education, including serious games and showcases a number of games created for use in healthcare settings in the UK
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Playing Games with HealthThe use of game-like technologies in healthcare education
Dr Ben BettsCEO, HT2
www.ht2.co.uk
Is this a game?
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Is this a game?
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Is this a game?
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Is this a game?
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OK, so what is a game?
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Chris Crawford’s Taxonomy of Creative Expressions:
OK, so what is a game?
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A voluntary attempt to overcome unnecessary obstacles“”- Bernard Suits, The Grasshopper
Do games work?
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YesThis question has been answered by researchers many times…
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Multiple meta-studies (De Freitas et al; Sitzmann; Egenfeldt-Nielson for example) all suggest games can be more effective than more ‘traditional’ teaching methods, in the right circumstances.
“Advocates of game-based learning suggest that games create deeper learning experiences that more thoroughly engage participants in the attainment of learning objectives” (Betts et al, 2013).
New studies (Glass et al, 2013) also cite neuroplasticity improvements; other known benefits include improved core processing speed, faster logical comprehension, better contrast sensitivity and more…
See: Glass et al (2013). Real-Time Strategy Game Training: Emergence of a Cognitive Flexibility Trait. http://www.plosone.org/article/info:doi/10.1371/journal.pone.0070350
Are you a gamer?
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Designing Games
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The four pillars of games design, adapted from Jesse Schell; The Art of Game Design.
See: http://www.amazon.co.uk/The-Art-Game-Design-lenses/dp/0123694965
Designing Games
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POST Analysis Story Generation
Core Mechanics
Codec build (all
mechanics)
Manual PlaytestArt DirectionDevelopmentTest, test, test
What types of games exist for learning?
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• Drill & Practice• Serious Games• Simulations• COTS • ARGs • Gamification…
Drill & Practice
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• Ask players to perform a basic task in repetitions often with the aim of reaching rote retention.
• Used when information is explicit and well defined, for example maths and spelling.
• Tend to embody a single mechanic; don’t often include much in the way of story
Serious Games
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• Games played with a specific, real-world goal.
• Embody multiple mechanics, a well-defined space and a compelling story.
• Can be realistic – situated learning
• Can be more creative – deliberately NOT reality.
Simulations
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“If they don’t get one, I don’t get one”- Ken Mattingly, Apollo 13.
• High fidelity with the rules and conditions of the ‘real-world’.
• Not necessary to have a ‘win-state’.• Games create artificial barriers for
players to overcome; simulations replicate realistic constraints.
COTS and ARGs…
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• Commercial Off-The-Shelf games (COTS) can be used in learning contexts; especially those concerned primarily with strategy and decision making.
• Alternate Reality Games (ARGs) use the Internet as a platform to create a fictional narrative that players can interact.
Gamification
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• Applying game-like feedback to non-game situations.
• Often manifests itself as points, levels and badges, based on users performing certain actions.
• Typically used to promote short-term engagement
• Also consider ‘gamefulness’.
Some examples from Healthcare…
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These are all being demonstrated outside if you want to get ‘hands on’ later…
Defining MomentsSerious Game
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• High-stakes ‘epic’ story• ‘Meta’ game – it’s not
really about being good in a disaster
• Wrapped in extensive debrief and reflective activity.
COLPUniversity-level gamified course
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• Short-term progress checks for a long-term process
• Quantifiable level of understanding – part of the grading mechanism
• Gamification nudges social activity
ECMOTechnical simulation with gamification
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• Technically accurate• Gamification gives
feedback on quality of decisions and generates leaderboard
• Aim to promote re-use; time-on-task.
• Cuts initial cost of training
Mission to MarsSerious Game
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• Understand negotiation• Reflect on the emotions
felt in a high-pressure negotiation scenario
• Promote team-work in real-world networks
What about value?
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• Value is a function of cost and impact, it doesn’t mean ‘cheap’ or ‘expensive’.
• Some games aren’t good value.
• But games perhaps have more potential to be extremely good value than other options…