Game Design Considerations for Screening, Interim, and Diagnostic Educational Assessments
Game Design Considerations for Screening, Interim, and Diagnostic Educational Assessments
By David Dockterman, Yaacov Petscher, Alison McAfee, Eric Klopfer, Scot Osterweil, and Cody Diefenthaler
Abstract
βTo inform instruction, screening and diagnostic assessments must collect accurate data about the current state of the learner. Unfortunately, students may find assessments unengaging, intimidating, or irrelevant, undermining the quality of their effort and the quality of the data. The application of gaming to assessments may provide a way to boost and sustain effortful test-taker engagement, an integration that has thus far yielded mixed results, at best. Our interdisciplinary team reviewed and evaluated existing gamification research to consolidate a set of guiding principles for effectively merging diagnostic assessment tasks and protocols with a motivating game-like context in ways that specifically foster high levels of test-taker effort. We share our work in this paper to help inform ongoing research and development leading to more efficient and effective assessments of children.β
Reference
Dockterman, D., Petscher, Y., McAfee, A., Klopfer, E., Osterweil, S., & Diefenthaler, C. (2021). Game Design Considerations for screening, interim, and Diagnostic Educational Assessments. Retrieved March 24, 2022, from https://doi.org/10.7275/22109276
Keyword
Game design, educational assessments, diagnostic, gaming, research