重口味SM

These video games trick elementary and high school students into learning STEM

U of T computer science students develop educational games on immunology, optics and more
Playtesting crowd photo
Computer science students in Steve Engel's class developed educational video games and play-tested them with elementary and high school students from summer camps (photo by Geoffrey Vendeville)

It鈥檚 every high school student鈥檚 dream: playing video games instead of doing homework.

Steve Engels, an associate professor of computer science, teaching stream, predicts that one day games will not only replace traditional tests and assignments, but will do a better job teaching a range of subjects.

Games offer a number of advantages over paper assignments and tests, including immediate feedback, he says.

鈥淚f you have a lesson in game form, it tells you how well you鈥檝e done, it allows you to retry it, which you maybe can鈥檛 do with assignments or tests, and you can do it again until you master it,鈥 he says.

This summer, he's testing the concept with 重口味SM students who have been asked to develop games that trick students into learning some of the hard-to-teach topics on elementary and high school curricula: subjects related to science, technology, engineering and math.

The games by computer science students cover the basics of immunology, coding, optics and mitosis. Engels invited video game industry experts, teachers and grade school students, including groups from U of T鈥檚 , to try out the games and provide feedback.

Here are four examples of the games that were developed: 

Photo of Steve Engels
Steve Engels teaches a class on developing educational video games. (photo by Geoffrey Vendeville)


1. Central Immune System

Central Immune SystemThis game by computer science major and biology buff Alexander Chum puts bacteria and wounds in the players鈥 crosshairs.
As users move from one level to the next, they learn about the roles of platelets, macrophages and leukocytes (white blood cells). 鈥淲hat鈥檚 fun about this game is that you actually get to see things get destroyed,鈥 he says. 鈥淚n this case, the enemies are everything that make you sick.鈥

2. Crevice

CreviceIn this unusual game, the player takes on the persona of an old glass maker trapped in a cave who must find a way to redirect a sunbeam to shine on his plants using reflectors. 鈥淎 lot of times, at least when I was in high school in my (physics) class, a lot of people didn鈥檛 know how to make ray diagrams,鈥 creator and computer science major Karl Cui says. 鈥淗ere the players are able to move mirrors around and experiment without the pretense that it鈥檚 for a science lab.鈥

 

3. Clean City, Green City 

Clean City

It's 鈥淐lean-Up Day!鈥 Players test their knowledge of what gets recycled, composted and sent to the landfill in this game. Each wrong answer floods the landfill until it鈥檚 game over. 
Even adults sometimes put things in the wrong waste receptacle, says Monica Iqbal, a fourth-year computer science student. 鈥淚 feel like this game isn鈥檛 just for kids. It鈥檚 for anyone, really.鈥

 

4. Deadlock

Deadlock game

Learning to code isn鈥檛 always fun 鈥 unless the point is to hack one鈥檚 way out of a prison cell. The players use a block interface, which tells them which lines of code they can or can鈥檛 write, to open doors and control jail-busting drones. 鈥淲hen you unlock a door with the code we provided, the door will light up green and open in front of you,鈥 says Raymond Gao, a third-year computer science student. 鈥淲atching your code have an effect in real time isn鈥檛 something you get in other learning environments in programming.鈥

 

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