This interactive presentation provides a learner quest. The audience members go on an adventure to find a missing professor and discover how to create engaging learning along the way.
2. Lynda.com Courses: Gamification of Learning
YouTube Video
Web Site:www.karlkapp.com
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www.karlkapp.com
Email: karlkapp@gmail.com
Twitter: @kkapp
Books: Play to Learn, Gamification
Lynda.com: 6 Courses
13. Look, there is a clue
written on the wall. Let me
see what is says.
Wow, it’s a lot bigger in
inside than it looks from
outside.
14. Hmm, it says: When creating engaging learning
should you
Make it easy so we don’t discourage the learners.
or
Make it challenging, knowing some will fail the
first few times.
15. Jones, B., Valdez, G., Norakowski, J., & Rasmussen, C. (1994). Designing learning and technology
for educational reform. North Central Regional Educational Laboratory. [Online]. Available:
http://www.ncrtec.org/capacity/profile/profwww.htm and Schlechty, P. C. (1997). Inventing
better schools: An action plan for educational reform. San Francisco, CA: Jossey-Bass. Chapter 2
“The Gamification of Learning and Instruction.”
It needs to be challenging.
16. Look! Good games give players a set of
challenging problems and let them solve those
problems until they can do it automatically.
Then those same games throw a new class of
problem at the players requiring them to re-
think, their now—taken for granted—mastery.
They must learn something new and integrate
into their old mastery.
21. Carolina Jane, a world
explorer, I’ll help you solve
this mystery.
And, help you learn about
creating engaging instruction.
22. So, keep in mind things that are too easy or too
difficult will not pique a learner’s interest
because they lead to boredom or frustration.
Research has shown that challenge is
correlated with both intrinsic motivation
and motivation related to the desire to
seek competence and self confidence.
White, R.W. (1959) Motivation reconsidered: The concept of competence. Psychological Review, 66, 297-333.
23. In fact, give them the
Kobayashi Maru of challenges.
31. Found a clue, when creating engaging
instruction, should you start with
Written instructions and explanations of
terms and concepts.
or
The learner taking action right away before
any explanations.
32. Not Sure? And, you’re
our tour guide?
Why does this answer make
sense?
33. Good game designers know that games
are engaging because they require action
right away.
Action draws in the player and
encourages further engagement.
Instruction needs to be the
same.
34. Too often instructional design is
about the content and not about
the actions that need to occur.
35. Make the learner do something
Answer a question
Identify a procedure.
Solve a mystery.
Confront a challenge.
Pick a team.
Make a decision.
Hands on.
36. Active learning increases student performance in science, engineering, and mathematics
Scott Freemana,1, Sarah L. Eddya, Miles McDonougha, Michelle K. Smithb, Nnadozie Okoroafora, Hannah Jordta,
and Mary Pat Wenderotha. PNAS Early Edition (Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences)
Check out my folder on
this topic.
38. Wow look at this
place.
Come in here, I
found a clue.
39. Look a clue written on the wall.
Provide didactic, step-by-step,
prescriptive instruction.
or
Create a sense of mystery and
curiosity about the instruction.
40. Check out my notebook on the
topic.
It is always a good idea to build curiosity and
mystery into instruction. It draws in the learner
and provides motivation.
58. They are over
here, genius.
It says, when creating a game should you…
Encourage activities that might lead to failure.
or
Create an environment where failure is not
possible.
59. In games, failing is allowed, it’s
acceptable, and it’s part of the
process. Games accommodate
failure with multiple lives, second
chances and alternative methods of
success.
60. Research indicates that our
brains grow when we make a
mistake because it is a time
of struggle.
Our brains react with greater
electrical activity when we make a
mistake than when we are correct.
Moser, J. Schroder, H.S., Heeter, C., C., Moran, T.P., & Lee, Y.H. (2011) Mind your errors: Evidence for a neu
mechanism linking growth mindset to adaptive post error adjustments. Psychological Science, 22, 1284-1
61. Do you punish failure in your
learning design or do you allow and
encourage the freedom to fail?
62. Hey, we’re in some kind
of dark cave here at
the top of the world.
68. Hey, I know that’s Malone’s
Theory of Intrinsically
Motivating Instruction.
69. Fantasy provides two learning benefits...
Cognitively a fantasy can help a learner apply old
knowledge to understand new things and help them
remember the content.
Emotionally, a person can connect with the
experiences and not bring with it “real-world”
concerns or fears
70. You are now one step closer to finding
your professor and solving the case of
what makes engaging instruction.
79. When given control over their learning, research
has shown that learners invested more and
attempted more complex strategies than when
they had no control. So give learners control.
Cordova, D.I., & Lepper M. R. (1996) Intrinsic motivation and the process of learning: Beneficial effects o
contextualization, personalization and choice. Journal of Educational Psychology, 88, 715-730
80. Let them choose levels, where to enter
the content, what questions they would
like answered.
Cordova, D.I., & Lepper M. R. (1996) Intrinsic motivation and the process of learning: Beneficial effects of
contextualization, personalization and choice. Journal of Educational Psychology, 88, 715-730
82. Yes, and I think there is
a clue in the smoke signals
coming from the fire.
83. So what does it say,
what’s the question to
solve?
84. Do learners remember facts
better when…
Presented in a bulleted list
or
Presented as part of a story?
85. People tend to remember
facts more accurately if they
encounter them in a story
rather than in a list.
Carey, B. (2007) this is Your Life (and How You Tell it). The New York Times. Melanie Green
http://www.unc.edu/~mcgreen/research.html. Chapter 2 “The Gamification of Learning and Instruction.
And they rate legal arguments
as more convincing when built
into narrative tales rather than
on legal precedent.
Researchers have found that the
human brain has a natural affinity
for narrative construction.
86. Speer, N. K., Reynolds, J. R., Swallow, K. M., & Zacks, J. M. (2009). Reading Stories Activates Neural
Representations of Visual and Motor Experiences.Psychological Science, 20(8), 989–999. doi:10.1111/j.1467-
9280.2009.02397.x
When a person reads about certain activities
in a story, the areas of the brain associated
with those activities are activated.
87. Speer, N. K., Reynolds, J. R., Swallow, K. M., & Zacks, J. M. (2009). Reading Stories Activates Neural
Representations of Visual and Motor Experiences.Psychological Science, 20(8), 989–999.
doi:10.1111/j.1467-9280.2009.02397.x
The research found that
different brain regions track
different aspects of a story.
If the character moved, the
corresponding region of the
brain for physical movement
became active.
92. It’s a research report conducted in
India. With the words “spaced
repetition” and “retrieval practice”
written in the margins.
93. Before I tell you about the research,
let me ask you a question.
94. Let me tell you about the study. It used a
randomized control group in a trial at ten sites in
southeast India with over 500 subjects.
Working Indian men (aged 35—55 years) with
impaired glucose tolerance were randomly
assigned to either a mobile phone messaging
intervention or standard care..
Ramachandran, A. et. al. Effectiveness of mobile phone messaging in prevention of type 2 diabetes by lifestyle modification in men in
India: a prospective, parallel-group, randomised controlled trial The Lancet Diabetes & Endocrinology, Early Online Publication, 11
September 2013 doi:10.1016/S2213-8587(13)70067-6
96. Lowered risk of
developing Type 2
diabetes by 36%.
Ramachandran, A., et. al.., Effectiveness of mobile phone messaging in prevention of type 2 diabetes by lifestyle modification in men in
India: a prospective, parallel-group, randomised controlled trial The Lancet Diabetes & Endocrinology, Early Online Publication, 11
September 2013 doi:10.1016/S2213-8587(13)70067-6
Hey, no spoiler
alert?
97. Where did you
come from.
Ramachandran, A., et. al.., Effectiveness of mobile phone messaging in prevention of type 2 diabetes by lifestyle modification in men in
India: a prospective, parallel-group, randomised controlled trial The Lancet Diabetes & Endocrinology, Early Online Publication, 11
September 2013 doi:10.1016/S2213-8587(13)70067-6
I know, it’s called
Spaced Repetition.
100. “Retrieval Practice” alone can provide improved
recall performance by as much as 10-20%.
Require students to recall content
to enhance learning.
In other words, use testing to
reinforce learning—not just for
evaluation.
101. Hey, I have an idea, can
you combine the two?
102. Yes, combining Spaced Retrieval
and Retrieval Practice is really
powerful.
One study in the subject of Anatomy
and Physiology revealed retention
benefits of between 35% and 61% with
average of 41%.
Dobson, J. L. (2013) Retrieval practice is an efficient method of enhancing the retention of anatomy
and physiology information Advances in Physiology Education 37: 184–191, 2013;
doi:10.1152/advan.00174.2012
103. In fact, most gamification
platforms use both “Spaced
Repetition” and “Retrieval
Practice” to reinforce learning.
115. Never, mind, let me read it.
To focus the learner’s attention when
starting instruction is it better to use…
Behaviorally defined objectives
or
Questions posed to the learner
116. I’m cracking the whip on this
one…don’t use behaviorally
defined instructional objectives
to begin instruction.
What?
121. So what did you learn today
about engaging instruction?
122.
123. Ok, so we solved the mystery
of engaging instruction but
where is the professor?
The professor has
been here all along,
guiding us toward
engaging instruction.
132. Lynda.com Courses: Gamification of Learning
YouTube Video
Web Site:www.karlkapp.com
Books
www.karlkapp.com
Email: karlkapp@gmail.com
Twitter: @kkapp
Books: Play to Learn, Gamification
Lynda.com: 6 Courses