Affiliation:
1. University of Washington, Seattle, Washington
2. University of Washington, Seattle, WA
Abstract
Educational technology requires a delivery mechanism to scale. One method that has not yet seen widespread use is the educational campaign: large-scale, short-term events focused on a specific educational topic, such as the Hour of Code campaign. These are designed to generate media coverage and lend themselves nicely to collaborative or competitive goals, thus potentially leveraging social effects and community excitement to increase engagement and reach students who otherwise would not participate. In this article, we present a case study of three such campaigns that we ran to encourage students to play an algebra game—DragonBox Adaptive: the Washington, Norway, and Minnesota Algebra Challenges. We provide several design recommendations for future campaigns based on our experience, including the effects of different incentive schemes, the insertion of “tests” to fast-forward students to levels of appropriate difficulty, and the strengths and weaknesses of campaigns as a method of collecting experimental data.
Funder
Office of Naval Research
William and Flora Hewlett Foundation
Adobe Systems
Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation
Microsoft
Publisher
Association for Computing Machinery (ACM)
Subject
Human-Computer Interaction
Cited by
15 articles.
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