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Authoring game-based learning activities that are manageable by teachers

dc.contributor.authorCardoso, Pedro
dc.contributor.authorMorgado, Leonel
dc.contributor.authorCoelho, António
dc.date.accessioned2019-12-30T12:46:32Z
dc.date.available2019-12-30T12:46:32Z
dc.date.issued2020-01
dc.description.abstractThe great ambition of using games as the cornerstone of education is hindered by its associated teaching workload. The BEACONING project developed a framework based on an authoring tool for gamified lesson paths, which has been rolled-out in large scale across Europe. It includes stages for planning game-based educational activities, plus their deployment, monitoring, and assessment. Games are great tools for learning and as such many teachers wish to employ them in their teaching practices. Notwithstanding, using games in education is hard. It is hard to plan the time and the teachers’ tasks; the students’ activities; to keep track of what each student is doing; to assess and provide feedback, and so on – and all these obstacles encumber and limit educational adoption of games [1]. The BEACONING project [L1] acknowledges this and created the concept of a gamified lesson path [2], by linking game plots (the narrative and level design) provided by game development companies with educational activities within a triadic assessment model [3]. Using an authoring tool developed at INESC TEC (Figure 1), a learning designer creates a gamified lesson path by selecting a game plot, linking learning activities structured as missions and quests into it, and finally by associating those activities with specific learning goals and challenges (mini-games). Learning designers are either experts at creating educational content, within companies and organisations, or teachers with training in this area. By selecting a gamified lesson path, teachers can automatically deploy games to their students, adapting them to specific individual requirements. Not only students receive the games as part of educational activities from their teachers, but this deployment is also linked to the learning management platforms: teachers can track which students have not yet started learning within a gamified lesson plan, which ones are currently amidst it and where, and which students have finished it and how. Students can also track which teachers and courses have assigned them gamified lesson plans, and how they are progressing in each. All of this linking is done via anonymization, using the BEACONING platform as middleware, so that gaming companies can deploy games to individual students over the Web without actually knowing who each student is: individual details are kept within the learning management system and retrieved directly by the game on students’ smartphones, without being sent to the companies or even to the middleware. BEACONING provides each student’s game with information on the actual web call to retrieve information such as player names, but this transit of information occurs solely between the student’s smartphone and the school’s learning management system. By using BEACONING to track students’ progress, teachers can better manage their time and effort allocation when employing videogames in school, thus reducing their workload and empowering them to use these as a reliable and regular pedagogic approach “anytime and anywhere”. This authoring and deployment pipeline have now been successfully rolled out in large-scale testing across Europe (Figure 2) [L2]. BEACONING’s prototype and authoring pipeline approach holds the potential for application in many other non-traditional learning activities. Beyond gaming, we are exploring and expanding this approach to enable widespread deployment of active learning, location-based learning, immersive environments, outdoor activities, and more.pt_PT
dc.description.versioninfo:eu-repo/semantics/acceptedVersionpt_PT
dc.identifier.issn0926-4981
dc.identifier.urihttp://hdl.handle.net/10400.2/8951
dc.language.isoengpt_PT
dc.peerreviewedyespt_PT
dc.publisherERCIMpt_PT
dc.relationBreaking Educational Barriers with Contextualised, Pervasive and Gameful Learning (BEACONING)
dc.rights.urihttp://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/pt_PT
dc.subjectLMSpt_PT
dc.subjectAuthoringpt_PT
dc.titleAuthoring game-based learning activities that are manageable by teacherspt_PT
dc.typejournal article
dspace.entity.typePublication
oaire.awardTitleBreaking Educational Barriers with Contextualised, Pervasive and Gameful Learning (BEACONING)
oaire.awardURIinfo:eu-repo/grantAgreement/EC/H2020/687676/EU
oaire.citation.titleERCIM Newspt_PT
oaire.citation.volume119pt_PT
oaire.fundingStreamH2020
person.familyNameCardoso
person.familyNameMorgado
person.familyNameCoelho
person.givenNamePedro
person.givenNameLeonel
person.givenNameAntónio
person.identifierR-000-93D
person.identifierR-000-217
person.identifier.ciencia-id6418-6B1E-F6B4
person.identifier.ciencia-id7119-981F-18A9
person.identifier.ciencia-idBA1E-EDE1-477E
person.identifier.orcid0000-0001-5517-644X
person.identifier.orcid0000-0001-7949-2877
person.identifier.ridF-2692-2010
person.identifier.ridG-2216-2011
person.identifier.scopus-author-id23025615500
person.identifier.scopus-author-id57188679352
project.funder.identifierhttp://doi.org/10.13039/501100008530
project.funder.nameEuropean Commission
rcaap.rightsopenAccesspt_PT
rcaap.typearticlept_PT
relation.isAuthorOfPublication293196d8-9ad2-4092-8a99-a2bbfb48d65a
relation.isAuthorOfPublication310d3b15-55de-40c7-8977-5becf9010910
relation.isAuthorOfPublication6e665843-0e0a-4277-a3a7-ef0799750226
relation.isAuthorOfPublication.latestForDiscovery310d3b15-55de-40c7-8977-5becf9010910
relation.isProjectOfPublication6eb29a06-2cbf-4f85-800f-467f7900b317
relation.isProjectOfPublication.latestForDiscovery6eb29a06-2cbf-4f85-800f-467f7900b317

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