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Digital game plays with curriculum for the future

Digital game plays with curriculum for the future

NZCER has collaborated with Wellington-based game developers Gamelab in an exciting new venture to get people thinking about learning now and for the future.

The Curriculum for the future game, available through iTunes and Google Play, lets players pick a curriculum idea and try to persuade the community of its merits. It plays with ideas such as:

• Could an artificial intelligence design a curriculum better than a human?

• Could kids and adults work together to design learning?

• What about everyone learning through hands-on making and creating?

It’s based on a workshop resource that NZCER has run with students, teachers and the wider community to provoke rich open-ended conversations about the purposes of schooling, and what students might need to learn now and for the future.

The game features stunning hand drawn artwork, an original soundtrack and education ideas from the sublime to the ridiculous.

Senior researcher Rachel Bolstad, who has led the NZCER team on the development, says though the game tackles serious questions, they’ve strived for a light touch.

“We want people to laugh while they think. The game tries to raise interesting questions and feed people's thinking about education and the future. We're encouraging players to tell us what ideas, thoughts, and feelings the game brings up for them, and what kinds of conversations it provokes.”

Dan Milward of Gamelab says collaborating with educators to develop the game has been a highlight. “I think this kind of game has huge potential to stimulate debate and discussion about the future of education. It’s a great tool.”

Curriculum for the future can be downloaded for free from the iTunes store and Google Play until the end of February. After that it will cost $5.99.

ENDS

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