Teach your kids to be an Entrepreneur through Videogames

 

Games are a great opportunity for kids to trial and error a range of concepts and test concepts in a controlled and safe environments.  They really offer young entreprenuers a chance to test there ideas, dedication and strategies though play.  Below are a couple games that will let your junior Donald Trump's see how they fair in the business world without losing a dollar in the real world.

The Lemonade Game is aimed at making the most money in thirty days from selling drinks to thirst customers over summer.  Be sure not to buy too much produce if the weather is going to be pretty cool and don't price yourself out of the market.

In Fedville, kids can open a virtual savings account at the local bank and watch their money grow. As they learn their way around town, they can earn trivia cards. There are also movies about saving money, and kids can virtually shop at local stores, but only if they have earned enough money first.

I would love to hear if you have any more suggestions

Great Simulation Game that teaches kids about Natural Disasters

Stopdisastergame.org is a great website for your students to learn about various natural disasters such as tsunamis, bush fires, earthquakes and more by managing a village or city through a disaster period.  Anyone who has played SimCity will pick this up in a flash and discover the purpose of the game with ease.  Quite simply you are given a budget and limited time to create natural and manmade infrastructure to both prevent a an imminent catastrophe and manage it once it occurs.  Your kids will really enjoy this challenge and it has loads of replay value in it across a range of disasters.  Check it out here.

Create web applications and Games in minutes

Sharendipity is a web based creativity suite whereanyonecan build and deployengagingandinteractiveweb applications.  There are loads of educational applications and games available and loads of scope to create.

Go. Build something wonderful today.

Check out Sharendipityhere.

Free creation tools inside the browser

Integrate third-party web services

No programming required

Deploy your apps anywhere on the web

How to get your students programming their own games in an hour with SCRATCH

Scratchis a brilliant visual programming tools specifically targeted at getting students and novices involved in programming and makes it dead simple for them to create a game or multimedia presentation in next to no time.

I personally have introduced a lot of classes to SCRATCH and have found the best way to do this is is introduce show themsome videos explaining what it is and what it does.  Then have about 3 copies of theinstruction cardsprinted and laminated to give to your students.

Once you have laminated cardsthey will show the kids how to do a specific task such as make an object follow the mouse, add music to a game or animate a sprite.

Each task takes bout 5 minutes and there is about 12 in all.  I guarantee this will sow a seed in your students head and they will be making their own scratch apps and games in a jiffy.

Interactive Game sites for Students you can use confidently in the classroom

FunbrainandFunschoolare two easy to use web sites that are ful of great activities for students across a range of curriculum areas.  They are generally flash based activities aimed at primary / elementary aged students but there are a few activities that would be suitable for high school students also.  Both sites have a fair amount of advertising on them but  I guess that is what keeps sites such as these growing.  Anyhow be sure to check outFunbrainandFunschoolnext time you are looking for some maths and literacy games for your kids.

TOP 5 Educational iPad and iPhone Games

Don't forget to take a look at our recent article highlighting the top 5 educational games available on the iPad, iPod and iPhone.  We would love to hear you thoughts and suggestions.  Check it out here.

TOP 5 Educational iPad and iPhone Games

IGN the undisputed king of online gaming content recently published its top 25 iPad, iPhone games and it is well worth the read if you own an apple device and enjoy a good game. As an avid gamer and educator I have taken this a little further by identifying the top 5 educational gaming experiences on the iPhone and iPad.  Now I am not interested in times table challenge games or blatant learning games I am talking about games that require you to think outside of the square in across a range of curriculum areas without even really knowing that you're participating in a learning experience.  These are the games that will improve our memory, number facts and knowledge of the world and get us addicted through fun and challenging elements which keep us coming back for more.  Take a look at my list an would love to hear your thoughts.

 Civilization Revolution - Build. Discover. Conquer. Rule the World! Price: $6.99

You can't takeover the world without an understanding of philosophy, economics, appreciating the value of technology and science, effective strategy protocols and how to bargain with your friends and enemies rule the world. Civilization encompasses this all in one game and those who value and understand history will have much to learn and build upon to succeed in this game.  Yes it has been dumbed down a little for the iPhone but anyone who has played the complete PC version of this brilliant game will appreciate the chunks of you life that have been stolen from you and you don't need that on your phone.

IGN Says:  "Outside of SimCity, no game defines the strategy genre like Sid Meier's Civilization. This inventive, clever, and deep sim hands over the keys to the kingdom, letting you chisel that fate of your empire out of the twin stones of destiny and chance. Civilization remains one of the top PC of all time, but last year, 2K Games boldly attempted to fashion a console-friendly edition of the blockbuster Civilization IV. It was called Civilization Revolution and it was a surprising success. Streamlined but not stripped down, Civilization Revolution offers the same grand arc of guiding a society from stone age to space age. Now, 2K has released an iPhone edition of the game built on that formula but with touch screen controls and scaled back visuals."

The Oregon Trail:  Price $1.19 

The Oregon Trail is a unique strategy and educational game relating the first pioneers' journey to Western America. It is based on a resource management formula already proven in the U.S., where the game is an actual icon for adults and kids.

IGN SAYS:  "If you're as old as some of us around here, you likely remember The Oregon Trail as the pioneering edutainment game on every Apple IIe and Commodore 64 in your school's computer lab. Usually, when a game promises to "make learning fun," it's a lie – but in the case of the Oregon Trail, it really was a gas. Between resource management and avoiding death by dysentery, you really did absorb lessons about actual Oregon Trail. Gameloft's iPhone edition does not spoil your nostalgia at all. Instead, it only streamlines some of the resource management so you can have more fun with storming the trail itself, watching out for danger, and soaking up the sights. And I'll be damned if the historical facts you get for reaching checkpoints weren't cool rewards."

 

iBlast Moki Price $3.99

Do you love bombs, creating contraptions and solving physics puzzles?
iBlast Moki is an original physics puzzle game where you blast cute little Mokis with the help of bombs and other crazy items.

IGN SAYS:  "The general rule with iPhone gaming is that the absolute best games on the iPhone are those that are made specifically for the platform. (There are exceptions, like GTA: Chinatown Wars.) iBlast Moki is one of those "only on iPhone" action-puzzle games that is not just a true showpiece for the iDevices, but also just a damn fine videogame. You drag bombs around hundreds upon hundreds of stages (many created by a vibrant online community) to blast the little Mokis into exits. As the game progresses, new elements are rolled out such as ropes and balloons. But at all times, the physics remain reliable and consistent; it's never unfair. Bundle the great challenge with smart controls and an attractive cartoon look that pops off the iPhone screen, and you have a game that every single iPhone gamer should own."

ZenBound 2:  Price $3.99

Zen Bound 2 is a meditative puzzle game of wrapping rope around wooden sculptures. It is a tactile game, with a focus on making rope, wood and stone look and feel real and believable.

What IGN Says:  " Just as the iPhone 4 hit the market, so too did Zen Bound 2, the sequel to one of the best puzzle games on the market at the time. It not only leveraged the Retina display to deliver some of the best visuals available on the platform, but Zen Bound 2 also brought several gameplay additions to the table for those who were looking for more than simply improved graphics. Zen Bound 2 successfully brings the spirit of the first game to the next level while also innovating the style of play."

 

Drop 7:  Price $3.99

- Test your smarts with this deceptively simple abstract puzzle game.  Master the unique gameplay twist in seconds but fine-tune your strategies forever.
- Choose from three modes of play: the more relaxed Normal Mode, the fast- paced Hardcore Mode, or the mysterious Sequence Mode.
- Zone out to the hypnotic numerical spell of Drop7 – you may become a master without even trying!

What IGN Says:  "Drop7 has the two most important things that make for a great puzzle game: It's simple and you can always do better. If you added up all the time I've dedicated to Drop7, I've spent probably a month of my life trying to best my last score. On one end, Drop7 rewards mathematical acumen. If you are smart about numbers, where you let them stay on the board and how you set up for big chains, you can rack up massive points. On the other end, Drop7 requires a lot of luck. Even the best laid plans can blow up in your face if a bunch of hidden tiles turn out to be a series of 1s strung together. Just writing about Drop7 makes me want to play right now. G'bye.

Explosive fun for students with THE POWDER TOY a great science game

My kids have been playing this game for months at school and I really only sat down to have a good look at it this week and found to my surprise that THE POWDER TOY was both a fun game and great educational opportunity for students to learn about chemical reactions.

Kids love to blow things up which is essentially what Powder is all about but it goes a great deal deeper  than simply allowing students the opportunity to play around with many "powdery" pixels of diverse natures, each having different simulated physical and chemical properties.

Some fall faster than others, a few are "solid" and hang in mid-air, etc. A good number of them are flammable, so all you high-school chemistry students who just want to see things blow up should get hooked on this game pretty easily. = ) Almost every substance has a special quality when thrown together with another: for example, water solidifies magma; thunder electrifies metal; torch burns what hits it but is dissolved by water; and the infamous virus eats through and overruns all others, eventually turning back into the first material it came in contact with. Searching for all the unique reactions is part of the entertainment.

As you can see there is plenty here for your casual gamer to hard core science geek to get something from POWDER.  I would recommend it to boys especially looking for something a little different.