Minecraft Edu Hackjam Outcomes Presentations

Subscribers:
6,920
Published on ● Video Link: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Z7PunNPhWWc



Minecraft
Game:
Minecraft (2011)
Duration: 30:45
42 views
0


Learn how K12 teachers can use Minecraft to teach core content. Come get a look at brand new lessons created by teachers in the Minecraft Education Curriculum Hackjam.

Speakers:
* Sara Cornish (Senior Director, Games For Change)
* Bron Stuckey (Global Specialist in GamePlay)




Other Videos By Games for Change


2017-09-20Panel - A Conversation with Federal Funders and Artists
2017-09-20Government Grants for Health & Science Games
2017-09-20Designing with Purpose: Creating Games for Global Competency
2017-09-20Playtesting and Prototyping Games for the Classroom
2017-09-20Panel - Teleporting Audiences to Distant Horizons
2017-09-20Axon - A Social Media Showdown in Space, A Live VR Game
2017-09-20Beyond the Holocaust: Embodying Jewish Values in WWII Games
2017-09-20Panel - All of the Above: Building Learning Games for Both Home and School
2017-09-20Panel - From Player to Maker: Lessons Learned from Young Creators
2017-09-20Narrating Chronic Pain - Using Video Games to Tell Aspirational Stories
2017-09-20Minecraft Edu Hackjam Outcomes Presentations
2017-09-20Panel - Brain Training Games - Fact, Fiction, or Somewhere in Between?
2017-09-20Panel - Building a Bigger Tent: How to Make Media that Includes All Kids
2017-09-20iCivics - From Concept to Scale - 9 Years in the Baking. Why Good Ingredients Matter.
2017-09-20Playing for Change - Ten Years of Kids Helping Kids in the Virtual World of Club Penguin
2017-09-20VR for Change - Can VR Experiences Reduce Prejudice and Promote Empathy?
2017-09-20Panel - Pick Me! Win More Fans With These Lessons from Platform Providers
2017-09-20What do 'Fake News' and Video Games Have in Common?
2017-09-20Mini-Talk Series - Developing Games for Informal Learning Spaces
2017-09-20Beyond Representation: Designing Games With Sociocultural Context
2017-09-20How to Use Comic Books and Augmented Reality to Challenge Sexual Violence



Tags:
G4C
games for change
games for change festival
G4C17
video games
social impact
Minecraft
Minecraft Education Edition
hackjam
education
kindergarten
Sara Cornish
Bron Stuckey
Games for Learning



Other Statistics

Minecraft Statistics For Games for Change

At present, Games for Change has 12,163 views spread across 16 videos for Minecraft, with approximately 6 hours of Minecraft video on his channel. This is 1.17% of the total watchable video on Games for Change's YouTube channel.