Games Without Borders Getting Started Guide Helpful steps for getting started: 1) Choose the global issue you want to focus on. Remember, you can work with up to three teammates! Consider the questions: What global issue interests you most? What global issue do you think needs more awareness? Which global issue do you want to learn more about? Look below under Choosing a Global Issue for general topic ideas. Talk to parents, friends, and teachers for ideas. Also use online resources, books, and magazines. 2) Next, think of a game model that would best fit the issue. A board game? Video game? Card game? Think about which of these models best conveys the important concepts related to your global issue. It may help to think of some games you already enjoy and use those as models. Check out the different game examples listed under Game Ideas below for ideas. 3) Brainstorm a rough outline about how the game will work. Then decide whether you want to begin with the visual or written portion. 4) To start working on the visuals, scroll down to the Resources for Developing Game Visuals/Storyboard section for resources specific to the game model you chose. 5) Make sure and follow the Submission Guidelines *Note to Teachers: Using This Resource Guide This resource list is meant as a guide for teachers, students, and parents. This guide is not a comprehensive list, nor is it meant to limit students as they identify their global topics and their game models. We suggest using this resource guide as part of a classroom or small group brainstorming session. We suggest all students read our Judging Rubric before starting their game design, and again before making final revisions to their design. The rubric provides clear, detailed, guidance on how designs will be graded by judges. 1) Choosing a Global Issue: Game topics may include geography, migration, travel, and international cultures; or global issues such as climate change, global health, violent conflict, the global economy, or international development. The United Nations Millennium Development Goals are a good place to start. The goals include: End Poverty and Hunger, Universal Education, Gender Equality, Child Health, Maternal Health, Combat HIV/Aids, Environmental Sustainability, and Global Partnership. http://www.un.org/millenniumgoals/ Our online resource packets also contain many global issues: The Bottom Billion, YCA Packet, and GYLI Resource Packet. 2) Game Ideas: Explore and play the games below. For more examples, download: How Internet Games and Virtual Worlds Can Help you Deliver More Global Education, a Teachers Resource Guide from our website. 1 Games Without Borders Getting Started Guide You will notice that some games target younger children while others are appropriate for high school or adult players. Your game can target any age group. *Parents and Teachers: Please note that some games may not be appropriate for younger children. Please preview games before introducing them to your students. Global Health Medmyst: Medical Mysteries on the Web http://medmyst.rice.edu/index.html Educational Issues: Health, Science Description: MedMyst is an Internet-based adventure in which you are on a mission to discover the causes of diseases. As you follow clues to solve the mystery, you are also given the opportunity to explore chemistry, pharmacology, neuroscience, medicine, public policy, history, and more. Developer: Rice University, Adobe Flash Developer: Globaria Games, educational web games made by students Pathogen Panic! http://www.bioquestacademy.org/ *Scroll to the right side bottom of the page Educational Issue: Health Description: Cholera is on the attack! These bacteria are extracellular pathogens that produce nasty chemicals that make people feel sick. Help the good cells get rid of the bad ones, and be careful to avoid the HIV virus! Developer: Bioquest Academy Environment The Garbage Dreams Game http://www.gamesforchange.org/play/the-garbage-dreams-game/ Educational Issue: Garbage, Recycling Description: The Garbage Dreams Recycling game invites players to take on the role of the Zaballeen, who impressively recycle 80% of the trash they collect. Start with one neighborhood, one factory, and one hungry goat. You have 8 months to build your recycling empire and get Cairo’s total recycling as high as you can. Can you be as eco-savvy as the Zaballeen? Developer: Duane Dunfield, Mai Iskander, Jeremy Bernstein Keep Cool Board Game http://boardgamegeek.com/boardgame/14698/keep-cool Educational Issue: Global Climate Politics Description: Each player takes on a role in the world of global climate politics. Players represent their country’s interests, whether they are the USA or a developing country, and must also consider actors like the oil industry and environmental organizations who help determine if the players’ efforts are successful or not. In each round of the game you have to decide between taking measures for climate protection that are good for all, or ones that might benefit your role more than others. The risk: catastrophes like droughts, floods, or pandemics. The goal: welfare and a stable global climate. Whoever reaches his or her targets first wins, yet if you are not cooperative enough all players might lose due to a collapse of the world climate. 2 Games Without Borders Getting Started Guide Developer: Klaus Eisenack and Gerhard Petschel-Held of the Potsdam Institute for Climate Impact Research, Spieltrieb (2004) Synchronized Saviors www.globaloria.org/index.php/games-front-page/item/synchronized-saviors * Created by students Educational Issue: Environment Description: Players learn facts about pollution and alternative energy resources as they complete levels by picking up trash. Developer: Globaria Poverty AYITI: The Cost of Life http://www.unicef.org/voy/explore/rights/explore_3142.html *Games 4 Change Award Winner Educational Issues: Human Rights, Poverty Description: This game challenges players to manage a rural family of five in Haiti. Over four years, players struggle to keep their family healthy, educated, and alive. Developer: Youth-Produced, Global Kids & GameLab Inside the Haiti Earthquake: http://www.gamesforchange.org/play/inside-the-haiti-earthquake/ *This game may not be suitable for younger students Educational Issue: Relief work in disaster situations. Description: Inside the Haiti Earthquake is an online simulation that allows users to play the role of an aid worker, a journalist, or a survivor. You will be given the opportunity to commit to various strategies and experience their consequences. MDG Matters: Get the 8 straight http://www.tigweb.org/themes/mdg/game/index.html Educational Issue: Millennium Development Goals Description: Test your knowledge on the Millennium Development Goals by matching the cards and answering trivia questions. Accumulate points based on your speed and accuracy. Developer: Taking It Global Peace Corps Challenge Online Game http://www.peacecorps.gov/kids/ Educational Issues: Water Contamination, Sanitation and Disease, Microfinance, Agriculture, Agroforestry, Education, Women’s Issues Description: Students navigate through the tiny town of Wazunu to solve problems. Developer: Peace Corps 3 Games Without Borders Getting Started Guide Refugees and Immigration Against All Odds, Refugee Game – U NHCR http://www.playagainstallodds.com/ *This game may not be suitable for younger students Age: 14+ Educational Issues: Global Conflict, Human Rights Description: This game teaches the global refugee experience: from the time people are forced to leave their countries of origin to the beginning of their new lives abroad. Developer: UNHCR: The UN Refugee Agency I can end deportation (ICED) http://www.icedgame.com/ *This game may not be suitable for younger students Educational Issues: Human Rights Description: This online game puts players in the shoes of an immigrant to illustrate how unfair immigration laws deny due process and violate human rights. These laws affect all immigrants: legal residents, those fleeing persecution, students, and undocumented people. Developer: Breakthrough International Diplomacy Crisis of Nations http://www.icivics.org/games/crisis-nations Education Issue: International Politics Description: Take the helm of your own country and work together with others to solve international problems! In this game of diplomacy, four nations must work together to solve crises, but each has a hidden agenda: to collect 15 resources of a certain type and win the game. Whether you cooperate in the interest of global harmony or deceive your way to victory, only the shrewdest of leaders will come out on top. Developer: Justice Sandra Day O’Conner, iCivics Connect with Haji Kamal http://www.kinection.com/projects/project-connect-with-haji-kamal/ *This game may not be suitable for younger students Education Issue: Cross-Cultural Communication Description: Guide your Lieutenant on how to behave in a meeting with an important community leader in Afghanistan. Developer: Kinection Other Phone Story https://market.android.com/details?id=air.org.molleindustria.phonestory2 *This game may not be suitable for younger students Educational Issue: Technology and the Environment 4 Games Without Borders Getting Started Guide Description: Phone Story is an educational game about the hidden social costs of smartphone manufacturing. Follow your phone's journey from the Coltan mines of the Congo to the electronic waste dumps in Pakistan through four colorful mini-games. Compete with market forces in an endless spiral of technological obsolescence. Developer: Phone Story 3) Resources for developing game visuals/storyboard: These resources may help students develop the Visual and Artwork section of the Submission Guidelines. Students may choose to submit a storyboard or a different type of visual. The resources below represent a range of approaches toward creating visual materials. Some are very brief, and others very technical. We suggest students first explore these examples for inspiration. Then, develop a clear, straightforward approach toward completing a polished and concise submission. - Designing video games: http://www.dummies.com/how-to/content/designing-video-games.html A video game is more than the sum of its pieces; a game has a synergy that, after the game is complete, makes it something unique. Creating this synergy takes a lot of technical know-how, as well as a sense of design and art. (Includes storyboard information) - How to Design a Game Storyboard: http://www.ehow.com/how_5184299_design-game-storyboard.html Game storyboarding is vital to the development stage of any modern-day gaming project. Even if you've got the game's plot perfectly mapped out in your head, it must be produced as a hardcopy storyboard to better communicate your ideas. - Storyboard template ideas: http://www.imaginecup.us/documents/FY12_GD_Storyboard_template.pdf http://www.norman.k12.ok.us/092/techscope/storyboard2.gif http://images.nextnewnetworks.com/7503.jpg http://fc08.deviantart.net/fs70/i/2011/105/9/1/storyboard_template_hirez_tiff_by_westwolf270-d3e1b00.jpg (See the following page for an example of a Game Storyboard) - How to make your own board game: http://www.wikihow.com/Make-Your-Own-Board-Game - How to make a trading card game http://www.ehow.com/how_2100170_make-trading-card-game.html - Read about the design process of the company behind Connect with Haji Kamal (see above) http://www.kinection.com/design-process/ 5 Games Without Borders Getting Started Guide Visual Example of a Game Storyboard: “Storyboard Design”, http://pingmag.jp/2006/10/27/storyboard-design/ Find the finished game here! The website and instructions are in Japanese, but the game is a version of Uno that is very playable even if you do not know Japanese. http://www.disneygames.jp/table/4007/ 6 Games Without Borders Getting Started Guide 4) How to create and upload a video: These links are for students who plan on submitting an optional video. Look at the Submission Guidelines for rules regarding finished videos. - Websites that help create a video: http://www.youtube.com/create - How to upload a video on YouTube: http://www.webvideozone.com/public/308.cfm 5) Online game design programs and eLearning resources: Tech-savvy students can use these programs to create an online game: - Kodu http://www.kodugamelab.com/ http://fuse.microsoft.com/page/kodu Kodu is a new visual programming language made specifically for creating games. It is designed to be accessible for children and enjoyable for anyone. The visual nature of the language allows for rapid design iteration using only an Xbox game controller for input (mouse/keyboard input is also supported). - Sample Branching Scenario: http://blog.cathy-moore.com/2011/07/sample-branching-scenario-cool-tool/ Branching scenarios can be a pain to design. Happily, you can use a simple tool called Twine to easily draft the scenario and produce it. This post looks at a scenario that demonstrates Twine’s basic features and makes a point about teaching through stories. - Game Star Mechanic: http://gamestarmechanic.com Gamestar Mechanic is a game and community designed to teach kids the principles of game design and systems thinking in a highly engaging environment. It is designed for 7- to 14-year-olds but is open to everyone. The following resources may be too complex for the Youth Challenge but are for students who are further interested in eLearning: - Elearning samples: http://blog.cathy-moore.com/elearning-samples/ This page links to samples of interactive graphics, simulations, and other materials from many different sources. Maybe they’ll give you ideas for your own projects. - Learning Games Network: http://www.learninggamesnetwork.org/index.php?/about/general 7 Games Without Borders Getting Started Guide The Learning Games Network is a non-profit spin-off of the MIT Education Arcade that works with partners in our growing "network" of publishers, schools, researchers, and others to produce new educational products and services. We apply the most current research in the learning sciences, creative design, and technology to the development of game-based learning resources. 6) Other game contests: Explore and gain ideas from other game competitions: - Games for Change: Catalyzing Social Impact through Digital Games. http://www.gamesforchange.org/ Games for Change facilitates the creation and distribution of social impact games that serve as critical tools in humanitarian and educational efforts. Games for Change aims to leverage entertainment and engagement for social good. - Kodu Cup http://blogs.technet.com/b/microsoftupblog/archive/2011/06/13/kodu-cup-winners-announced.aspx A competition that challenged kids across the United States (from the age of 9 to 17) to use Kodu – a free game development tool from Microsoft – to create their own video game for the chance to win great prizes and the chance to attend the Imagine Cup World finals in New York City in July. - Stem Challenge Game Design Competition http://stemchallenge.org/winners/Default.aspx Inspired by the Educate to Innovate Campaign, President Obama’s initiative to promote a renewed focus on Science, Technology, Engineering, and Math (STEM) education, the National STEM Video Game Challenge is a multi-year competition whose goal is to motivate interest in STEM learning among America’s youth by tapping into students’ natural passion for playing and making video games. - “Students Design a Facebook Game for Generation Cures”: http://www.learninggamesnetwork.org/index.php?/community/community/nervous_quest/general/ Neuro's Quest, a single-player Facebook game for high school students and above that loosely models the behavior and potential treatment of neurodegenerative illnesses such as Parkinson’s or Lou Gehrig’s disease, was conceived by a team of teachers and students from Nashoba Regional High School as part of the first Game for Good Design Camp organized with Generation Cures at Children's Hospital Boston and sponsored by MassBioEd and Microsoft in summer 2010. - US Imagine Cup 2012: http://www.imaginecup.us/Index.aspx#fbid=IC63Mj_eVc0 Imagine a world where technology helps solve the toughest problems. First of all, it's thrilling to make a difference, and with the power of gaming, people can have fun while fighting global issues. Build a full game from scratch and make it something truly unique. Think of this competition as an important step in your budding career as a game developer or an entrepreneur in the game business. For further questions and information, please contact us at: [email protected] 8
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