Can Creating Computer Games Boost Students' Skills?

by Susan Gunnewig Posted on: February 1, 2010 at 3:22 PM

According to an article in, Science Daily, the answer is “yes!”  The January 24, 2010 article stated that many computer scientists in the United States think that creating computer games, rather than just playing them, can boost skills.  The boost would come in the student’s critical and creative thinking skills, as well as broadening his or her computer skills.  As we know, computer games have a broad appeal that transcends gender, culture, age and socio-economic status.  In the current issue of International Journal of Social and Humanistic Computing, we learn of such a case at Oklahoma State University.  The principal investigators in the study make a case for using rapid computer game creations as an innovative teaching method that has the potential of helping to bridge the digital divide between “those people lacking computer skills and access and those with them.”   

There is an increasing recognition of the digital divide.  “The digital divide refers not only to unequal access to computing resources between groups of people but also to inequalities in their ability to use information technology fully,” explains the evaluative team.

As I read this article, I thought of the digital divide that exists in early childhood.  Another huge problem is the lack of appropriate software for young children.  We are to ensure the efforts in early childhood are made to narrow this divide with solid research findings and make certain best practices in early childhood are not ignored. 

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Category: Early Childhood News | Research | Technology

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Hatch Blog - Insights into Early Childhood Education

About the author

Susan Gunnewig
Susan, a renowned expert in the field of early childhood and the Director of Product Development at Hatch, was a coauthor of the CIRCLE and Head Start STEP training as well as co-creator of the Texas Early Education Model (TEEM), and the School Readiness Project. During her tenure as faculty at the Children’s Learning Institute located in the University of Texas Medical School, she presented at approximately 100 conferences and conventions across the United States and has coauthored many early childhood research articles.
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