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Silvana di Gregorio :: Blog :: Week 4 - Quest Atlantis - initial impressions

February 10, 2010

I just spent a couple of hours yesterday in Quest Atlantis (in the plague village - which is teaching about persuasive writing). I was totally immersed in this world and didn't notice the time go by. Barab et al talk about their learning engagement theory which they developed in QA - integrating learning, playing and helping in the context of social issues in an aesthetically-rich dramatic play. The plague story does this with students taking on the role of an investigative journalist trying to find evidence to persuade the community to either support or not Dr Frank(instein)'s experiment to find a cure for the plague. The story line is engaging (satisfying Malone's idea of fantasy and curiosity and uncertain outcome). QA seems to emphasize social responsibility as well - so there are moral issues interwoven in the story. I haven't finished all the activities but I think the storyline will let you argue both sides of the argument although there are nudges to re-consider your argument as you gather more evidence - but you only are suppose to use evidence that supports your argument (but I haven't finished it yet - so I don't know if there is scope to address counter-evidence in a way that supports your argument.)

Keywords: Barab, IDGBL10, Malone, Quest_Atlantis

Posted by Silvana di Gregorio


Comments

  1. Hi Silvana - I'm finding Quest Atlantis very slow with re-rendering pages and it keeps freezing when I try to move my avatar about.  The initial induction with the 'fairy' took ages - are you finding the programme slow or is it just me?  I lost interest long before I really got involved in a quest!

    Noreen DunnettNoreen Dunnett on Friday, 12 February 2010, 08:41 UTC # |

  2. I too never made it past the fairy. It kept freezing each time I was intended to see a 'dream' image and I would have to start again. I do not have the world's fastest internet connection but that is not uncommon so I can see how this may cause accessibilty issues for some learners, especially if the task is to conitinue outside of the classroom.

    sarah paynesarah payne on Sunday, 07 March 2010, 18:25 UTC # |

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