Engaging Aboriginal learners in the school curriculum can be quite a challenge given issues of cultural and linguistic differences. Even more so, these differences can be expanded when the students are in their adolescence. Creating learning environments that engage learners, while providing deep learning opportunities, is one of the biggest challenges for teachers in remote communities. This paper reports on a reform initiative that centred on the use of a digital game, Guitar Heroes, in a remote Aboriginal school. It was found that the digital media provided teachers with opportunities for new learning spaces and resulted in additional unintended learning outcomes
There is considerable enthusiasm in many quarters for the incorporation of digital games into the cl...
In contemporary times, there are children who suffer from limited access to resources, even in some ...
Aboriginal languages all over the world are threatened with extinction. Aboriginal youth from Canad...
This report on a recent forum in Melbourne that brought together teachers of Indigenous students, Ab...
The use of games in education and for learning has a long tradition ranging from commercial games to...
This article presents a number of possibilities that digital technologies can offer to increase acce...
Over the past decade Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander studies and perspectives have been mandat...
Over the past decade Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander studies and perspectives have been mandat...
Many Aboriginal languages are becoming extinct due to lack of fluent speakers. Computer games offer ...
This paper challenges current practices in the use of digital media to communicate Australian Aborig...
Teachers' beliefs about what it is (or is not) possible to achieve with digital games in educational...
Teachers’ beliefs about what it is (or is not) possible to achieve with digital games in educational...
Information and communications technologies (ICT) are seen as crucial in improving educational oppor...
Digital games have been used sporadically in classrooms since the 1970s, but their adoption rate con...
Teachers\u27 beliefs about what it is (or is not) possible to achieve with digital games in educatio...
There is considerable enthusiasm in many quarters for the incorporation of digital games into the cl...
In contemporary times, there are children who suffer from limited access to resources, even in some ...
Aboriginal languages all over the world are threatened with extinction. Aboriginal youth from Canad...
This report on a recent forum in Melbourne that brought together teachers of Indigenous students, Ab...
The use of games in education and for learning has a long tradition ranging from commercial games to...
This article presents a number of possibilities that digital technologies can offer to increase acce...
Over the past decade Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander studies and perspectives have been mandat...
Over the past decade Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander studies and perspectives have been mandat...
Many Aboriginal languages are becoming extinct due to lack of fluent speakers. Computer games offer ...
This paper challenges current practices in the use of digital media to communicate Australian Aborig...
Teachers' beliefs about what it is (or is not) possible to achieve with digital games in educational...
Teachers’ beliefs about what it is (or is not) possible to achieve with digital games in educational...
Information and communications technologies (ICT) are seen as crucial in improving educational oppor...
Digital games have been used sporadically in classrooms since the 1970s, but their adoption rate con...
Teachers\u27 beliefs about what it is (or is not) possible to achieve with digital games in educatio...
There is considerable enthusiasm in many quarters for the incorporation of digital games into the cl...
In contemporary times, there are children who suffer from limited access to resources, even in some ...
Aboriginal languages all over the world are threatened with extinction. Aboriginal youth from Canad...