Students Co-Create NZ History Educational Video Game
Friday 16 December 2016
Students Co-Create NZ
History Educational Video Game
Students at
Hobsonville Point Primary School have created a video game,
Hobsonville Point Time Machine, to teach fellow students
about New Zealand history. In the game’s time machine
students can experience a slice of New Zealand in
pre-European, early settler, pre and post-World War II
timezones.
Students researched local history
facts, designed landmarks and suggested game missions which
were then worked into a professional educational video game
by game studio InGame. Anyone can play the adventure game
for free online at
http://game.hvps.school.nz:8080
Focused around the
historic Hobsonville Point region, the game features local
landmarks such as former Army base buildings, The Landing,
Sunderland flying boats and Mill House. Students can also
virtually explore long-gone features such as a Maori Pa, a
kauri forest with gum diggers and a Catalina on a World War
Two rescue mission.
When Hobsonville Heritage Trust
approached the school to learn about local history, students
suggested an interactive game as the best way to teach the
topic.
Hobsonville Point Primary School Principal
Daniel Birch says the student research that went into
developing the interactive game was a valuable learning
experience in itself. “Playing games can be education, and
so can creating them. The class researched local history and
then had to piece it together in game form. It’s great
that students could work on 21st century digital skills
while learning about 19th and 20th century New
Zealand.”
InGame’s Stephen Knightly says
education games have great potential. “While people often
see educational games as valuable because they’re
attractive or engaging for youth, they have other
educational advantages too. Exploring and discovering while
on a mission is an engaging and active learning experience,
more so than passively memorising facts. Educational games
featuring New Zealand content are rare, so we hope this will
be a great resource to spark classroom discussions about New
Zealand history.”
Hobsonville Point has a rich
history. It was named after the first Governor of New
Zealand, William Hobson, who initially considered it for the
site of New Zealand’s capital. Hobsonville was then home
to an army base and airfield which is now the site of a
major residential building development, making it
Auckland’s fastest growing suburb.
The
educational project was developed by InGame with funding
from the Hobsonville Heritage Trust and the Hobsonville Land
Company.
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