Rock Paper Shotgun wrote:Year after year, many schools struggle to teach kids basic math and reading skills. Portal, on the other hand, taught my childlike, directionally-crippled brain a slew of hyper-complex spatial reasoning abilities. In about 30 minutes. So I guess maybe it could be a good fit for the classroom. And hey, what do you know (aside from a Portal-imbued slew of hyper-complex spatial reasoning abilities)? Valve seems to think so too. The resulting program’s been dubbed Teach With Portals, and it’s just the beginning of Valve’s new Steam For Schools initiative.
Teach With Portals’ official website outlines the form its proposed amendment to the laws of education (and physics) will take:
Steam For Schools, meanwhile, currently takes the form of a stripped down version of Steam that prioritizes educational functionality above all else. The hope, however, is that it can expand into something broader with time.Teach With Portals wrote:“Valve recently began collaborating with educators to develop game-related teaching tools that revolve around STEM (science, technology, engineering and math) education. We’ve created Teach With Portals as a destination for this partnership, providing free content and game design tools, as well as an interactive community for exchanging lessons and experiences.”
“We understand that learning is not fulfilled by a one-size-fits-all approach, so we’re engaging with a community of educators, parents and students to create infinite possibilities for learning. The educational version of our Puzzle Maker empowers students and educators to craft unique puzzles, explore worlds, and share custom lesson plans. Teachers can also simply leverage other contributor’s shared lessons, selecting among the best of them to suit their learners’ needs.”
You can already scroll through a list of lesson plans, though, and at the moment, they range from simple physics and math (“getting faster as you fall,” “conservation of momentum”) to really cool (“man on the moon”) to ensuring that I can never win Are You Smarter Than A Fifth Grader (“building a harmonic oscillator”).
Normally, this is the part where I’d speculate where all of this is headed, but I just got off the phone with Valve, so we’ll have a larger piece up very soon about the Steam-powered giant’s plan to reinvent the positively ancient “modern” education system. It’s incredibly fascinating stuff. Here’s the short version, though: if you’re now finished with school, you were born at the wrong time.
Teach With Portals - Steam for schools
Moderator: Thanas
Teach With Portals - Steam for schools
Bring Your Valve To School Day: Teach With Portals from Rock Paper Shotgun
If it waddles like a duck and it quacks like a duck, it's a KV-5.
Vote Electron Standard, vote Tron Paul 2012
Vote Electron Standard, vote Tron Paul 2012
Re: Teach With Portals - Steam for schools
Plenty of victims of the positively ancient education system because perfectly good value sources for Valve. Can this possibly match Minecraft for Metalshop?
Re: Teach With Portals - Steam for schools
google sketchup is being used to help autistic kids too.
this portal thing sounds ntresting, but i don't know if they'll get past the kind of kids ho would play it anyway.
this portal thing sounds ntresting, but i don't know if they'll get past the kind of kids ho would play it anyway.
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- aussiemuscle308
- Padawan Learner
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Re: Teach With Portals - Steam for schools
Who'd have thought a game could teach and who'd have thought a game that teaches physics could be popular and fun!!
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If you believe in Telekinesis, raise my hand.
If you believe in Telekinesis, raise my hand.