Learning Through Game Design Techniques

Gamification is a learning strategy where you apply game design elements to non-game settings such as when you are creating your course content. The purpose is to make the learning content more engaging. Hitchens & Tulloch (2018) see gamification as a natural extension of a generational change in how people learn. 鈥淢any of today鈥檚 students have spent their formative years learning through mediated experiences, such video games, online environments and social networks. Rather than dismissing the significance of this, or this or trying to train students out of their 鈥渂ad habits鈥, there is the opportunity to embrace the pedagogic potential of these systems鈥 (Hitchens & Tulloch, 2018).

Gamification VS Game-Based Learning

Sometimes you will also hear about Game-Based Learning at the same time as Gamification, but they are not the same. Game-Based Learning is a full-fledged game designed to help meet a learning outcome. Most faculty will not have time to design an entire game-based course, so we will concentrate on learning more about gamification.

Watch Karl Kapp explain the difference between Gamification and Game-Based Learning.

How to Apply Gamification to Your Content

To apply gamification strategies, you can go as simple or as complex as you want. Some effective techniques are highlighted below: (some of the best elements to gaming are earning points and leveling up, collecting badges and trophies, participating on a leaderboard, multiple tries to get it right (lives), and choices).

  • In traditional classroom structures, students earn grades by losing points. In video games, players gain experience points (XP) to level their characters up. Implement a grade schema that mimics using XP. talks about using XP in a training context, but the lesson can be applied academically.
  • Remember when you used to get stickers on your homework? Those were the days. Badges and trophies work the same way and are used to recognize accomplishments in a course. For example, if you have a writing course and want students to attend a workshop hosted by the Writing Center, you could then reward them with a 鈥淲riting Hero鈥 badge or trophy for their effort. Students may find it fun to try to collect as many badges/trophies as they go along.

    In his blog post, Bernard Bull, gives some suggestions for how to use digital badging in your course.

    • Establish a badge system design that scaffolds the learning experience, requiring certain competencies before proceeding to more complex course challenges.
    • Use badges to require ongoing evidence of certain knowledge and skills over an extended time.
    • Help students recognize their progress from basic skills to mastery using badge levels.

    Read more at 1 in Your Courses.

  • This suggestion is more about setting the mood of the course. Any gamer knows that character progression in a game is called leveling up. And progression of the game moves through stages. So, if you want to incorporate gaining XP in your grading schema, you can combine it with a simple naming convention of calling your modules 鈥渟tages鈥 and giving the students new titles when they reach specific amounts of XP gained. For instance:

    0 鈥 100 XP = Newbie

    101 鈥 200 XP = Novice

    201 鈥 300 XP = Dragon Slayer

    Basically, anything you want that makes sense in your course!

  • It doesn鈥檛 have to always be about emulating fighting games! The Faculty of Education at the University of British Columbia gamified one of its online courses on adult education. Elements of the game included role-playing, giving the "gamer" the ability to choose which tasks to complete, public acknowledgment of achievements, as well as a peer-voting system.

    Watch the learning design manager, the instructor, and a student of this course talk about how the various gaming aspects of the course motivated, empowered, and engaged the students.

  • Allowing students to customize their content is not only great for motivation; it is best practice for creating accessible content via the Universal Design for Learning (UDL) framework. It gives students choices for how to complete assignments (paper, presentation, video) or participate in discussions (text, audio, video) whenever possible. It allows students the chance to fail and retry low-stakes quizzes (games having multiple lives).
  • Depending on how and where you use gamification in your course, the benefits will vary.

    • Can increase student engagement
    • Can help provide the motivation to complete the course
    • Students are likely to spend more time on learning as the courses are fun and enjoyable
    • Frequent feedback opportunities allow for deeper understanding of materials
    • Students can connect socially in a familiar way
    • Gamified courses lead to high performance learning and help learners in committing knowledge to long-term memory

    There are cons involved in gamifying your content.

    • Could possibly decrease student attention span
    • Lots of initial time is needed to plan the course or build the content
    • When choosing which elements to gamify, you must make sure to keep it relevant and useful
    1. Better Learning Experience: The learner can experience "fun" during the game and still learn if the level of engagement is high.
    2. Instant Feedback: It provides instant feedback so learners know exactly what they got right and wrong.
    3. Better Learning Environment: Gamification helps learners practice real-life situations and challenges in a safe environment.
    4. Prompting Behavioral Change: Points, badges, and leaderboards would surely make training awesome.
    5. Can be Applied for Most Learning Needs: Gamification can be used to fulfill most learning needs including soft skills, awareness creation, and compliance.
    6. Impact on Bottom Line: On account of all these aspects that touch and impact learners, it can create a significant performance gain for organizations.

Recommendations

External Links

  • offered by ETSU (long, but worth it! Bring popcorn!).

  • .

  • Really neat example of Gamification through the .

  • [video] by E-Learning Uncovered.

  • [video] by Ever Educating.

  • [video] by Ever Educating.

E-Books

These books are available at :

Bell, K. (2018). Game on!: Gamification, gameful design, and the rise of the gamer educator. Johns Hopkins University Press.

Information Resources Management Association. (2018). Gamification in education: Breakthroughs in research and practice. Information Science Reference.

Research
. Gamification in higher education: How we changed roles [paper presentation]. The 9th European Conference on Games Based Learning, Norway.

Ortiz, M., Chiluiza, K., & Valcke, M. (2019). Gamification through leaderboards: An empirical study in engineering education. Computer Applications in Engineering Education, 27(1). 10.1002/cae.12116