Gamify Your Classroom

Gamify Your Classroom

Interesting in making your class more engaging for students? Why not gamify your class. We'll share resources, tips, and tricks to get you started.

About Gamification

Gamification is the use of gaming principles to get students involved, engaged, and excited about learning. It consists of adding game elements to a non-game situation.

It introduces concepts like badges, levels, achievements, and game points to the classroom. Student are rewarded with these concepts when they succeed. By introducing a system of rewards without harsh penalties, student are not afraid to step outside of their comfort zone and fail. By removing their fear of failure we encourage them to learn.

Tips for Getting Started with Gamification

  1. Pick a theme

  2. Define how points will be earned

  3. Design your game

  4. Add components to the game to help your students reach their goals, such as:

    • badges

    • coupons

    • mystery quests

    • challenges

    • bonuses

  5. Keep a score board

Badge Resources

1. Class Badges

1. Brainscape

Brainscape is a web-based platform that is designed to help students study smart. The program creates flashcards and changes the pattern based on what students know and what they seem to be struggling with.

Site: https://www.brainscape.com/

Gamification Resources

2. Credly

Class Badges is one of the more popular badging platforms. Class badges allow the teacher to easily award badges aligned with learning goals.

Site: http://classbadges.com/

2. Breakout EDU

Breakout EDU creates engaging learning games for people of all ages. Games (Breakouts) teach teamwork, problem solving, critical thinking, and troubleshooting by presenting participants with challenges that ignite their natural drive to problem solve. You create the perfect breakout for your students!

Site: http://www.breakoutedu.com/

3. Create a Badge with Google Drawing

Credly allows teachers to create badges, upload their own designes, and give credit though the platform. It is available as a web-based version and iOS app.Site: https://credly.com/

iTunes Site: https://goo.gl/2KZjah

3. Class Craft

Class Craft is a free online, education role-playing game that teachers and students play together in the

classroom. Student can level up, work in teams, and earn powers that have real-world consequences. It provides a layer around any exisiting curriculum in order to transform the way students learn.

Site: http://www.classcraft.com/

4. Class Dojo

Class Dojo turns your class into a game of rewards and instant feedback. Class Dojo is a classroom management tool to help teachers improve behavior in their classrooms quickly and easily. It improves specific student behaviors and helps engagement by issuing awards and recording real-time feedback.

Site: https://www.classdojo.com/

5. Class XP

Class XP is a grade tracking dashboard for students that integrated game mechanics. Students earn points (grades), gain levels (grades), and in a way, have leaderboards. There are class valedictorians and student are essentially ranked based on points.

Site: http://classxp.org/

6. DuoLingo

DuoLingo is a massive online web platform designed to help student learn a given language online. Beginners start out with basic, simple sentences from the web, while advanced users receive more complex sentences. As one progresses, so does the complexity of the sentences they are asked to translate. Skill points are earned as students progress through lessons.

Site: https://www.duolingo.com/

7. PlayMoolah

4. For All Badges

If you have ever thought of creating your own badges, Google Drawing is a great tool to use. Read Alice Keeler's blog entry on how easy it is.Site: http://goo.gl/FxFWPZ

For All Badges is an iOS app that works in conjuction with For All Rubrics to align your rubrics with badges. For All Badges also integrates with Mozilla's Open Badges platform, and allows students to save badges to their "backpack."

Site: https://badges.forallschools.com/

5. Open Badges

Mozila Open Badges allows teacher to create and issue badges that do not have to be tied to a certain platform. Take the Badges 101 Quiz to see how it works and to earn your first badge.

Site: http://openbadges.org/

PlayMoolah is a financial literacy program catered towards children and young adults. Targeted at children in the 6+ age group, PlayMoolah allows students to play a game while learning the different aspects of: earn, spend, save, invest and give in a Dream-verse world. Students create an avatars for themselves and are able to purchase items for their avatar.Student also set goals for saving money. Site: http://www.playmoolah.com/

iOS Resources: https://goo.gl/bO5a2j

8. Ribbon Hero

Ribbon Hero is an add-in game, available as a free Microsoft download, to help educate users of Office 2007 and 2010 on how to use the tools available in the new ribbon interface. Once installed, the game can easily be initiated form any of the key Office programs, such as Word, Excel, and PowerPoint. Once in the game, the user is presented with challenges which can yield points if completed.

Site: http://www.ribbonhero.com/

9. 3D Game Lab

3D Game Lab is a gamified content creation and student tracking platform where teachers can design and share quests and badges to create personalized learning for their students. Students "level up" through the curriculum, choose quests they want to play, and earn experience points, badges, and awards.

Site: http://3dgamelab.com/

A Few More Game Tools

Ideas to Gamify Your Classroom

  1. Foster collaboration - Present the classroom syllabus as a form of a game and have students create classroom goals and rules with you.

  2. Provide instant feedback - In a game setting, feedback is essential for students to know how they are doing in the game. If a student makes a choice in a game, it is usually known immediately if that choice was the right one.

  3. Make progress visible - Progress bars and levels in games allow students to set goals for themselves and celebrate success once achieving them.

  4. Create challenges instead of homework - In games, students are constantly required to meet challenges, such as identify patterns or break codes. The same element can be applied to homework and projects in a fun, yet challenging way.

  5. Give students choice and a voice - Games often give students various choices. Instead of simply issuing a test, you can allow student to take different paths to demonstrate their understanding of the material.

  6. Offer badges and rewards - Badges or other rewards are a good way of recognizing student achievement and for giving students an incentive to continue reaching their goals.

  7. Allow for second chances - When a challenge is failed in a game, students are able to learn from their mistakes and try again.

Gamifying Professional Development

Additional Resources

Gamification Process

"Games are one motivator that almost all are responsive to."