Talk:Games as learning motivation

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Automatic switching

There may be several problems with arcade/action games as learning motivation:

Badly integrated exercises 
An exercise may appear much less interesting than the game phase in between, so the child could see the education as a very undesirable interrupt. A trick to counter that effect could be the use of game effects during the exercise. A child playing XBlast as the game phase may receive an XBlast character as a tutor during the exercise. This could change dynamically with the selected game(s).
Out of exercises 
A child may still enjoy playing the game but may be out of unsolved exercises (exercises previously determined by teachers, tutors or mentors). A selection of Wikipedia articles appropriate for children (e.g. [1]) could be a nearly unlimited resource of easy exercises that would require the child to answer questions about the article in a multiple-choice cloze (some gaps could require typing an answer instead of selecting one from the list, "none of the above"). It seems easy to collect a large amount of questions for each article, from which a selection algorithm could chose 5 to 10 questions which had not yet been asked or asked seldomly and 1 or 2 questions that had been answered correctly and 1 or 2 questions that had been answered incorrectly in the past.
Inadequate duration of exercise or game phase 
A child could influence the length of the exercises or game phases with six different levels of difficulty: (no games, short games, intermediate, short exercises, few exercises, short and few exercises). The recorded settings over time could also provide some feedback to mentors and teachers. A child keeping the setting at "short and few exercises" could have a tendency to become a game addict.
Pupils not requiring the motivation 
Pupils not requiring the motivation of games could be motivated to play games merely because others in their peer group were "bad" examples. (Playing a game is, of course, not in general a bad example).
Recompilation 
Pupils able to recompile an open source game to run outside the education context should probably be considered outside the scope of such a framework. A mentor or teacher could still notice the lack of any feedback to exercises (e.g.) in the the journal. A conceivable problem could be teenagers willing to share a re-compiled games with younger pupils. If all older pupils were mentors this seems highly unlikely (another point for formal mentoring).

Game control

A game could receive input from a "game scheduler" while running and gradually become less interesting when certain configurable (e.g. age dependent) limits were exceeded. This way games could be programmed to make a child lose interest, at least for the time being. Other games started as a substitute could start in a more interesting state but then more quickly change to a less interesting state. A child may be more easily prepared to accept the hints given by the game itself than requests from others.