Friday, February 26, 2010

Learning in Immersive Worlds

Thought I'd share this great report titled, "Learning in Immersive Worlds." It's directly relevant to several of our serious games projects. Some of the best stuff starts on the bottom of page 11:

...this report adopts a more general approach considering learning through play, with games and with simulations as part of a more general process of learning in immersive worlds. Immersive worlds are taken here to mean ‘microworlds’ that is the space of the game, the game-world. See call out box on microworlds. Realising that some games and simulations may be puzzles, board games or adventure-style games, this report focuses rather upon games and simulations as facilitators of virtual experiences rather than as sources of data or information which can be assimilated. Learning in immersive worlds itself is a process of learning, of flow or of activity (Csikszentmihalyi, 1992) that is a set of interactions or constructed reasoning that may or may not be transferred into lived experiences, expressions or outputs.

Microworld
The concept of ‘microworlds’ was introduced by Minsky and Papert (1971). Microworlds are given domains or environments which may be explored in a non-linear way by users or learners, the environment includes artefacts and objects, and learners may learn through exploring the environment and its objects in a relatively open-ended way.

For learning to be effective in immersive worlds, or indeed any contexts, a relationship needs to be made between what is learnt and how it is applied in practice. This broadly follows Kolb’s experiential learning cycle (Kolb, 1984) although connections are not always made between what is learned and how it is applied in practice. This is the reason why post-exercise reflection and correct embedding of the ‘virtual experience’ into a learning context is so important. The phrase ‘exploratory learning’ will be used in this report therefore to mean the learning process that takes place in an immersive, virtual context, that may (or may not) then be transferred into lived experience in the real-world, a real-world experience, or abstract reasoning or imagining at a later time or in another similar or usually dissimilar context. Exploratory learning is in a sense taken to mean play as rehearsal or ‘pattern formation’ or in a neurological sense as a ‘mapping of types of maps’ (Edelman, 1992: 109)
de Frietas, S (2006). “Learning in Immersive Worlds: A Review of Game Based Learning.” JISC, retrieved January 15, 2006 from http://www.jisc.ac.uk/media/documents/programmes/elearning_innovation/gaming%20report_v3.3.pdf

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