This volume is a powerful empirical follow up on Gee's notion of affinity spaces that asks us to move beyond the view of games as merely a designed object to the view of games as both designed object and emergent culture. What is so powerful about this collection of essays is the way in which they document how that combination - technology plus affinity group - enables and empowers truly transformative learning to take place. The authors in this volume represent the brightest young scholars in the field. Together, they offer us a much more nuanced and complex account for learning - one that is far more actionable because it is simply far more correct. This is a must-read for anyone interested in learning technologies in general. (Constance Steinkuehler, University of Wisconsin-Madison)
The chapter authors in this highly accessible text invite readers to use, expand, and critique current understandings of learning in affinity spaces. Though focused specifically on video game affinity spaces, findings from the eight research projects reported here have broad implications for how we view learning more generally, whether in school-defined literacy practices, online teacher education courses, or vastly different settings. (Donna Alvermann, University of Georgia)
This volume is a powerful empirical follow up on Gee's notion of affinity spaces that asks us to move beyond the view of games as merely a designed object to the view of games as both designed object and emergent culture. What is so powerful about this collection of essays is the way in which they document how that combination - technology plus affinity group - enables and empowers truly transformative learning to take place. The authors in this volume represent the brightest young scholars in the field. Together, they offer us a much more nuanced and complex account for learning - one that is far more actionable because it is simply far more correct. This is a must-read for anyone interested in learning technologies in general. (Constance Steinkuehler, University of Wisconsin-Madison)
The chapter authors in this highly accessible text invite readers to use, expand, and critique current understandings of learning in affinity spaces. Though focused specifically on video game affinity spaces, findings from the eight research projects reported here have broad implications for how we view learning more generally, whether in school-defined literacy practices, online teacher education courses, or vastly different settings. (Donna Alvermann, University of Georgia)