Description
The purpose of this thesis is to evaluate a tool used for assessing games for design features that teach players a basic understanding of systems. In order to prepare for my evaluation of both the games and the rubric, I researched multiple articles about the effectiveness of games in teaching, the concepts of systems thinking, and the importance of systems thinking. I evaluated five different games, following the rubric for whether the five games met the specific criteria laid out in each section and suggested improvements for how the games can meet any criteria that they fell short in. I then evaluated the rubric itself for ease of use, clarity, and effectiveness and suggested improvements on how to make the tool more clear and understandable. I conclude that the tool is indeed useful and does achieve its purpose of helping game designers and developers understand the criteria needed to teach a basic understanding of systems, but the rubric could be improved in order to make it more useable.
Details
Title
- Evaluating Tools for Assessing Games with Systems Thinking Design Principles
Contributors
- Morrow, Rachel Elizabeth Kaye (Author)
- Hayes, Elisabeth (Thesis director)
- Gee, James (Committee member)
- Siyahhan, Sinem (Committee member)
- Barrett, The Honors College (Contributor)
- Department of English (Contributor)
- School of International Letters and Cultures (Contributor)
Date Created
The date the item was original created (prior to any relationship with the ASU Digital Repositories.)
2013-12
Subjects
Resource Type
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