Computer Game Design, Mentoring Boost Interest in High-Tech Careers

April 11, 2011

It's Saturday morning, and some students in the Washington, D.C., area aren't sleeping in. Instead, this select group is at the city's McKinley Technology High School learning how to create educational computer games.

Funded by the National Science Foundation, the Game Design through Mentoring and Collaboration (GDMC) program aims to increase student interest in science, technology, engineering and mathematics (referred to as STEM fields) in traditionally underserved communities.


Instructional technology professor Kevin Clark works with young students on computer game design. Creative Services photo

GDMC provides an environment in which students learn the basics of professional-level 3-D modeling and animation software, as well as the logic of game design and programming.

Held on Saturday mornings throughout the school year at McKinley Tech, the sessions are offered on a drop-in basis. More than 200 middle and high school students from about 35 area schools have participated in the program since it started three years ago.

Students who have been in the program for a while have the opportunity to become paid mentors and work with the newer participants.

At the helm is Mason instructional technology professor Kevin Clark, who is the principal investigator on this project. He says mentoring is a large part of the program and helps students master the technology skills they've acquired.

“We spend a lot of time teaching the returning students how to be good mentors,” says Clark, who also is director of Mason's Center for Digital Media, Innovation and Diversity.

“We teach them strategies for troubleshooting if someone is having a problem or how to re-engage a student who doesn't seem to be working. Our big message is, ‘Don't do it for them. Help them learn.'”

Engaging the students does not seem to be a problem for Clark and his team.


Neda Khalili, a student in the College of Education and Human Development, is working with the students as part of her doctoral dissertation. Creative Services photo

“These students come in voluntarily to learn how to make video games. At the end of the day, some of them don't want to leave their computers,” says Neda Khalili, a doctoral student in the College of Education and Human Development (CEHD) who has been with the program since 2007.

The student gamers range in age from 9 to 19. About 85 percent are African American, and the majority of them are male. These students and their design processes are the subject of Khalili's dissertation.

“I am specifically looking at students creating video games about science topics,” she says.

“How do students think and learn about science topics that are unfamiliar to them when the goal is to create a video game? What would this learning process look like?”

The introduction of science topics into the game design was added to the program last year. For the 2010 summer session, Clark and his co-principal investigator Kim Sheridan, who holds a joint appointment in CEHD and the College of Visual and Performing Arts, were working with a specific group of kids for four weeks when they decided to take it up a notch.

They brought in Melanie Stegman, a biologist from the Federation of American Scientists. The gamers broke into teams and were tasked with creating a playable computer game that demonstrated a scientific concept related to immunology.

Stegman met with students to provide an overview of immunology and web-based resources. She also consulted with the teams on their specific projects. At the end of the camp, the teams presented their games and explained how they illustrated the scientific concept.

“It was wonderful to see how quickly students readily adapted their minds to focus on a science game,” says Khalili, adding, “They changed from picking ‘good' guys and ‘bad' guys to picking the right antibiotic to fight off the infection.”

As the gamers discussed glial cells and neurotransmitters, red blood cells twirled across computer screens. The studio atmosphere of the work space is another component of the program and a part of what Sheridan brings to the project.

“A lot of my work on the project has been about transforming the classes from a traditional step-by-step technology class into one in which kids work on projects that are more open-ended,” says Sheridan, who is also a visual artist.

The interdisciplinary nature of game design helps make this kind of collaboration happen.

As an example, Sheridan recalls one Saturday when the designers were trying to model swords. The conversation soon moved to how pendulums work and how to make the swords swing in animation mode.

“So we began talking about formulas and starting points, and how they have to program in the numbers,” says Sheridan.

“In order to make the game they want, they have to use math, science and art — and put it all together.”

In addition to the mentoring they receive while creating their games, the students are introduced to the professional aspects of the field through what Clark calls STEM summits.

Over the years, the young gamers have met with professional game designers, entrepreneurs and astronaut Bernard Harris to see how the skills they are acquiring can be applied in the workplace and to the college preparation they need to attain those careers.

“By integrating the STEM content, we are creating high-quality learning opportunities and demonstrating that what they learn now is relevant and applicable in their everyday lives,” says Clark.

This article originally appeared in Mason Research 2011.

By Colleen Kearney Rich

University News. Apr. 11, 2011