Digital Gaming in the Language Classroom
Designing Effective Curricula
Format:Hardback
Publisher:Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Published:19th Feb '26
£95.00
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Examines how single-player role-playing digital games may promote foreign language acquisition and looks at how they can be integrated into the curricula of foreign language classrooms to achieve desirable pedagogical outcomes.
This book examines how single-player role-playing digital games can promote foreign language acquisition and looks at how they can be integrated into the curricula of foreign language classrooms.
As the commercialization of digital games continues to expand and accelerate, some research in digital game-based learning has shifted from creating digital games with pedagogical applications to adopting commercial off-the-shelf digital games for pedagogical purposes. Relevant literature has continually identified massively multi-player online role-playing games (MMORPGs) as a specific genre which may benefit second language acquisition (SLA), primarily through a sociocultural perspective whereby language learners interact with linguistically more capable peers within the context of the game. However, there is a gap in research regarding whether these benefits to SLA are limited to social gameplay mechanics.
Wrobetz addresses this gap in research by using the smartphone edition of the single-player role-playing game (RGP) Life Is Strange in a mixed-methods study, measuring vocabulary acquisition and long-term retention from gameplay relative to controls. The author also examines how the perception of both smartphone gaming as a language-learning tool and the target language culture shifted throughout the study.
This volume helps guide future research in digital games-based language learning to broaden the scope of games identified as being conducive to SLA. It also outlines how to structure formal foreign language curricula around the use of a single-player RPG to achieve the most desirable pedagogical outcomes.
'This important new book provides evidence from a large scale learner-based study of the benefits of using a digital game in foreign language education. This comprehensive volume will doubtless become essential reading for educators , students and researchers in the fields of computer assisted language learning, game studies and the learning sciences.' * Mark Peterson, Kyoto University, Japan *
ISBN: 9781350415928
Dimensions: 236mm x 154mm x 18mm
Weight: 500g
240 pages