Play is a Pretty Big Deal

Hung 2011) chronicles the political and historic trajectory of play and gameful experiences. So glad to read about the serious treatment of play.  I learned a lot from Alice Kolb and David Kolb’s research in “Learning to play, playing to learn: A case study of a ludic learning space.”

ancient dice sheeps knuckles

After listening to Jane McGonigal’s youtube video and seeing the prehistoric picture of dice, I was stunned that games went as far back as prehistoric fire!!

Exogenous and Endogenous are words that popped out as I read. I noticed them in an earlier article and I am glad to see them again. I think they are part of symbiotic vocabulary of economics being applied now to games. (At least I first learned about them in Eco class so that is their origin for me.)

I think the game Oscar devised that we were fortunate enough to be included on his team, is an example of an “endogenous game” because players must know about coding terminology and absorb basic facts before and during play. This is why I love “Knowledge Tree” so much, because there is a direct application for the time spent in Level 1 learning.

I think Hung would agree!

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Hung, A. C. (2011). Serious Games and Education. The work of play: meaning-making in videogames (pp. 10-30). New York: Peter Lang.

Alice Y. Kolb, D. A. K. (2010). “Learning to play, playing to learn: A case study of a ludic learning space.” Journal of Organizational Change Management 23(1): 26-50.