Skip to main content

Home/ FTW: Gaming for Learning/ Group items tagged mmorpg

Rss Feed Group items tagged

anonymous

the DAEDALUS PROJECT: MMORPG Research, Cyberculture, MMORPG Psychology - 0 views

  •  
    "a long-running survey study of MMO players. It is currently in hibernation mode. There will no longer be updated findings or surveys, but all information accumulated will remain available and comments will remain open."
anonymous

BorderHouse: A blog about diversity in gaming - 0 views

  •  
    "The Border House is a blog that celebrates diversity in gaming from a wide variety of cultural angles. We aim to be a friendly space for women, feminists, people of color, gay, lesbian, transgender individuals, those with disabilities, and any other marginalized group and their allies to read news and opinion on and discuss video games, MMORPGs, virtual worlds, and social media. Our goal is to provide up to date relevant news and opinion journalism without cultural bias and using a feminist lens."
anonymous

WoWinSchool Wiki | Collaborative Workspace for Educators - 0 views

  •  
    "This is a collaborative workspace for the development of instructional items for the use of the MMORPG, World of Warcraft, in a school setting. Please take a moment to explore the various sections of the site and if you would like to contribute, please email Lucas Gillispie at lucas AT edurealms.com."
anonymous

WoW Game-Play Motivations | PARC PlayOn 2.0 - 0 views

  •  
    In the survey, participants filled out a motivations inventory, focusing on the 3 main game-play motivations identified in earlier research on MMO players. The table below summarizes what is encompassed by the 3 main components of the model. The Achievement branch focuses on different ways of gaining power in the game. The Social branch focuses on different ways of relating to other players. And the Immersion branch focuses on different ways of being part of the story and game world.
anonymous

Terra Nova: A dissertation distilled into a single blog post /cry - 0 views

  •  
    "I recently defended my dissertation at the University of Washington College of Education, and, as you can guess from this post on Terra Nova, it was on learning in MMOGs. Specifically, I looked at the change in raiding practice of a group of World of Warcraft players as I played alongside them for 10 months. Of particular note, my data is from the early days of WoW, spanning the life and death of a Molten Core (and later BWL and AQ40) group that came together out of a multi-guild alliance. We were on a role-play server, which I think is important to note, given the group's shared values and goals of hanging out and having fun over and beyond itemization and progression. "
1 - 5 of 5
Showing 20 items per page