Co-Creating educational project management board games to enhance student engagement
Co-Creating educational project management board games to enhance student engagement
Management education scholarship has long outlined the need to enhance student engagement and participation in business schools, using more innovative teaching practices. This is increasingly motivating scholars to strive for more collaborative pedagogic dynamics between teachers and students. At the same time, research into co-creation of Game Based Learning material such as board games has largely focused on the value added to games when educators involve students in the design process. However there has been scant research examining the qualities of co-creational game design exercises as teaching experiences themselves, thus overlooking the opportunity to conceptualise such activities as an innovative teaching tool that can help educators facilitate student engagement and participation. To address this research gap, this paper presents a case study where Project Management students participated in two co-creation workshops designing educational Project Management games. Data were collected conducting focus groups at the end of the two workshops. Throughout the paper we have sought to present some positive outcomes of such processes as well as some critical points that emerged through the data that were collected. Mentionable outcomes include a series of positive characteristics of co-creative Game Based Learning activities like enhanced engagement as well as a list of challenges when facilitating such activities. The main findings of this research have been organised in two frameworks, one outlining five positive characteristics of co-creative Game Based Learning activities: engagement with knowledge, knowledge assessment, creativity, communication and the second outlining challenges in facilitating such activities: lack of focus, lack of structure and the need for more practice oriented games. The suggested frameworks can assist educators conceptualise and utilise such exercises to create more effective and participatory learning environments.
Co-Creation, Game Based Learning, Higher Education, Playful Learning, Project Management Education, Student Engagement
210-220
Gkogkidis, Vasilis
4e8cb6f5-c4ab-4e51-803a-b83d76e2c19a
Dacre, Nicholas
90ea8d3e-d0b1-4a5a-bead-f95ab32afbd1
7 September 2020
Gkogkidis, Vasilis
4e8cb6f5-c4ab-4e51-803a-b83d76e2c19a
Dacre, Nicholas
90ea8d3e-d0b1-4a5a-bead-f95ab32afbd1
Gkogkidis, Vasilis and Dacre, Nicholas
(2020)
Co-Creating educational project management board games to enhance student engagement.
Fotaris, Panagiotis
(ed.)
In Proceedings of the 14th European Conference on Game Based Learning, ECGBL 2020.
vol. 2020September,
Dechema e.V.
.
(doi:10.48550/arXiv.2104.04063).
Record type:
Conference or Workshop Item
(Paper)
Abstract
Management education scholarship has long outlined the need to enhance student engagement and participation in business schools, using more innovative teaching practices. This is increasingly motivating scholars to strive for more collaborative pedagogic dynamics between teachers and students. At the same time, research into co-creation of Game Based Learning material such as board games has largely focused on the value added to games when educators involve students in the design process. However there has been scant research examining the qualities of co-creational game design exercises as teaching experiences themselves, thus overlooking the opportunity to conceptualise such activities as an innovative teaching tool that can help educators facilitate student engagement and participation. To address this research gap, this paper presents a case study where Project Management students participated in two co-creation workshops designing educational Project Management games. Data were collected conducting focus groups at the end of the two workshops. Throughout the paper we have sought to present some positive outcomes of such processes as well as some critical points that emerged through the data that were collected. Mentionable outcomes include a series of positive characteristics of co-creative Game Based Learning activities like enhanced engagement as well as a list of challenges when facilitating such activities. The main findings of this research have been organised in two frameworks, one outlining five positive characteristics of co-creative Game Based Learning activities: engagement with knowledge, knowledge assessment, creativity, communication and the second outlining challenges in facilitating such activities: lack of focus, lack of structure and the need for more practice oriented games. The suggested frameworks can assist educators conceptualise and utilise such exercises to create more effective and participatory learning environments.
Text
Gkogkidis_Dacre_Co-Creating_Educational_Project_Management_Board_Games
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Published date: 7 September 2020
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Publisher Copyright:
© 2020 Dechema e.V.. All rights reserved.
Venue - Dates:
14th European Conference on Game Based Learning, ECGBL 2020, , Virtual, Online, 2020-09-24 - 2020-09-25
Keywords:
Co-Creation, Game Based Learning, Higher Education, Playful Learning, Project Management Education, Student Engagement
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 492587
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/492587
ISSN: 2049-0992
PURE UUID: a9a237d0-f003-4d06-b804-9ef3bbdc90d8
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Date deposited: 07 Aug 2024 16:30
Last modified: 08 Nov 2024 02:56
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Contributors
Author:
Vasilis Gkogkidis
Editor:
Panagiotis Fotaris
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