TY - JOUR
T1 - Enhancing Student Affect from Multi-Classroom Simulation Games via Teacher Professional Development
T2 - Supporting Game Implementation with the ROPD Model
AU - Riel, Jeremy
AU - Lawless, Kimberly A.
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2021 IGI Global. All rights reserved.
PY - 2021/1/1
Y1 - 2021/1/1
N2 - Educational simulations often require players to maintain a high degree of engagement for play in the simulation to continue. Student motivation and engagement is tied to affective factors, such as interest and self-efficacy. As such, game designs and teachers who implement them should promote student interest and self-efficacy in play. In this study, a responsive online professional development (ROPD) program was provided to teachers as they implemented a multi-classroom socio-scientific simulation game for middle school social studies classrooms called GlobalEd 2. A series of ANOVAs revealed that student affect toward the game and its content, including student interest and self-efficacy, was highest when their teachers likewise had a high degree of participation in the ROPD program. This evidence demonstrates the importance that ongoing implementation supports can have in classroom-based simulations and serious games and the benefits of ROPD in furthering the impact of simulation games.
AB - Educational simulations often require players to maintain a high degree of engagement for play in the simulation to continue. Student motivation and engagement is tied to affective factors, such as interest and self-efficacy. As such, game designs and teachers who implement them should promote student interest and self-efficacy in play. In this study, a responsive online professional development (ROPD) program was provided to teachers as they implemented a multi-classroom socio-scientific simulation game for middle school social studies classrooms called GlobalEd 2. A series of ANOVAs revealed that student affect toward the game and its content, including student interest and self-efficacy, was highest when their teachers likewise had a high degree of participation in the ROPD program. This evidence demonstrates the importance that ongoing implementation supports can have in classroom-based simulations and serious games and the benefits of ROPD in furthering the impact of simulation games.
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U2 - 10.4018/IJGCMS.20210101.oa3
DO - 10.4018/IJGCMS.20210101.oa3
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85105858371
SN - 1942-3888
VL - 13
SP - 34
EP - 54
JO - International Journal of Gaming and Computer-Mediated Simulations
JF - International Journal of Gaming and Computer-Mediated Simulations
IS - 1
ER -