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D&D Redux

I just went to the game store with my oldest daughter and helped her pick out her first set of D&D rules and dice. I was so proud that it brought a tear to my eye.

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UW-Madison student writes about rehabilitative uses of Wii

A student at UW-Madison wrote a paper discussing the rehabilitative uses of the Wii. She included an interview with David Williamson Shaffer in which he discussed how video games create virtual worlds that are energizing for players.

Wii and Physical Therapy
by Sarah Ross

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Unpacking the Digital Zoo: An analysis of the learning processes within an engineering epistemic game

Svarovsky, Gina N. (2009) Unpacking the Digital Zoo: An analysis of the learning processes within an engineering epistemic game, University of Wisconsin-Madison.

http://epistemicgames.org/eg/wp-content/uploads/svarovsky-dissertation-revision-v26.pdf

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Forward in Gaming & Cognition: Theories and Practice in the Learning Sciences

Shaffer, D. W. (2009). Forward. In Richard Van Eck (Ed.) Gaming & Cognition: Theories and Practice from the Learning Sciences. Hershey, PA: IGI Global.

http://epistemicgames.org/eg/wp-content/uploads/B2Prefatoryedited.pdf

This is the Forward for Gaming & Cognition: Theories and Practice from the Learning Sciences, a reference for computer science and informational technology management.

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Reflections on the Barracuda: Doing what you don’t necessarily love

A lot of parents I know don’t play computer games with their children for the very obvious reason that they (meaning, the parents) don’t like to play computer games themselves. And that makes a certain amount of sense, until you think about all the other things that you do as a parent with and for your kids that you don’t like doing yourself.

I was reminded of this is a very concrete way last week when I took my daughter and one of her friends to a synchronized swimming meet for their team, which is the first synchro meet I had ever been to. I did it because this is something that my daughter cares about. Something that she wants to spend time on. An interest that I want to share with her, even if I don’t hold it as an interest of my own.

Now, please don’t get me wrong: I have nothing against synchro as a sport. But driving an hour and a half and sitting for over two hours to…

Oh, well, rather than trying to explain, I’ll just copy my liveblog of the event below, which I imagine is not that different from how many parents experience watching their first videogame. It was really confusing, and a lot of it seemed pretty trivial to me as an outsider. But it was fun for my daughter, and in the end brings us closer together and lets me help shape her experience of that part of her life.

For those who don’t want to read below the jump, the point is: as a parent we do all kinds of things that our kids love but we don’t. And just like the decision to go see the latest Disney movie, whether you as a parent like to play computer games is not the last word on whether your could or should play them with your kids.

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