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Teacher-Gamer Revolution - using Role-Playing Games (RPGs) and World-Building in Education

Transforming student-teacher relationships via 36 life-skills, tabletop role-playing games, supportive co-teaching & peer-to-peer learning.

RPGs facilitating intrinsic motivation & distributed cognition, generates team building and solutionary leadership. 36 literacy, socio-emotional, kinesthetic & creative life-skills help learners with identity & expand trust in teachers. Skill acquisition is guided by the teacher, while students co-create the narrative through collaboration, failure, empathy, negotiation & risk-taking.

Shortlisted
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Overview

HundrED shortlisted this innovation

HundrED has shortlisted this innovation to one of its innovation collections. The information on this page has been checked by HundrED.

Web presence

2015

Established

3.3K

Children

28

Countries
Target group
Teachers
Updated
June 2023
That Multiverse Games becomes an educational discipline that takes on the domain of SEL once and for all. There currently is no such responsibility being assumed in schools. From Green School Bali: “To take this curriculum to the next level, we offer Zach this letter of recommendation to seriously consider his RPG curriculum proposal, his unique vision, passion & commitment to youth education."

About the innovation

Why did you create this innovation?

Originally developed as an extension of The Distinct Self Personal & Social Development Local Programme course cycle – a well-being curriculum program of life-skills electives for adult readiness at The English Montreal School Board in Quebec – RPGs in Schools program has now gone on to form a thriving life of its own in schools across the world by teacher-gamers at all levels of education.

What does your innovation look like in practice?

Glenn Chickering, then Head of Upper School, Green School:
“The main objective of the most recent Introduction to Roleplaying Games class was to explore collaboration in our Middle School with kids 11-14. Students reported in an end-of-class survey, that among 15 collaborative skills they worked with they developed the most enrichment in communication, critical thinking, storytelling, creativity, empathy, risk assessment and a clearer understanding between general skill and expertise. Students were working on finding confidence alone, feeling stronger together and as a team – sharing responsibility for common goals. Role-playing challenged students to take initiative, consider each other’s perspectives and collaborate in a game simulation where their characters would only survive by working together.
The students had a blast: There was perfect attendance by all 12 students for the first five classes and 100% of them reported that they 'liked learning how to play role-playing games.'”

How has it been spreading?

It is spreading through the confidence of teachers realizing themselves to be or training to be teacher-gamers. As a pioneer of this movement, I have created 6 videos that highlight the program's implementation, experimentation and success at the world famous alternative school Green School Bali (in both high school and middle school), as a home school aggregate program for multiple home schools in Bali and also at Pelangi and Empathy Bali (middle schools).

All these RPGs in Schools programs have been connected to Mindfulness ramps and Wilderness Conservation Trips life-skills development programs.

The Teacher-Gamer Revolution has also been successful as specialized community projects featured in the England with LIFEbeat UK youth camps and in Shanghai at Create China Coaching Center.

If I want to try it, what should I do?

Connect with teacher-gamers globally that are currently working with schools to bring RPGs into schools and learning environments by joining the "Teacher-Gamers and RPG Trainers" Facebook Group to ask questions, share your experiences and build partnerships. Follow the @teachergamerhandbook Instagram page. Train at Da Vinci Life-Skills to build your confidence and get a Teacher-Gamer Certificate.

Media

Multiverse - Role-Playing Games as an Educational Discipline is in the TOP 1% of papers downloaded on https://www.academia.edu/50948753/Multiverse_Role_Playing_Games_as_an_Educational_Discipline
BE Schools
Adapted into the Da Vinci Life Skills Curriculum for pilots in Cambridge, UK; Bali, Indonesia and Bermuda! https://davincilifeskills.com/BE%20Schools.html
Teacher-Gamer on Instagram: "What a great 2022! Here's to creating more awesomeness in 2023! . . . . . . #yearinreview #teachergamer #dnd #ttrpgcommunity #indonesia #ttrpgsolidarity #ttrpg #teacherlove #teacherlove #teachergames #teacherofinsta #tea
Piloted at Empathy School Bali in 2022! https://www.instagram.com/p/Cm0dq5eqfhB/
What is 'Authentic Education'?
Discussion on Peer-Reviewed and Approved Article on Authentic Education
Making a character part 3: Generating back story
World Building - Creating characters through relatable prompts and authentic deep dives into each learners unique imagination
Co-Teacher-Gamers: Even Better When We Teach Together! (RPGs in Schools 3)
Co-Teacher-Gamers working together to transform schools into life-skills hubs
RPGs in Schools: Zach's Teacher-Gamer Origin Story (RPGs in Schools 2)
The Teacher-Gamer Origin Story
Teacher Gamer Handbook
Why the Teacher-Gamer Handbook?
Role-Playing Games in Schools: Administrators
A Call to Education Administrators
Wild Mind Training: Teacher-Gamer Testimonials 1 (Kate and Patrick)
Testimonial from Student and his mother
#48 - Zach Reznichek: Teacher. Gamer. Innovator. - Terrible Happy Talks
What an honor to be interviewed by one of my Green School Bali colleagues Shannon Farrugia on his podcast which is blowing up with so many inspiring guestsWe talk Modern Learning in the digital age, Teacher-Gamers, and how to keep one of the most important skills as a priority in education through Role-Playing Games in Schools: the skill of knowing how to write.https://terriblehappytalks.com/48-zach-reznichek-teacher-gamer-innovator/
Teacher-Gamer Handbook
The future of education. What does it look like? Everyone in a box on their devices taking classes from teachers dead or live in a box somewhere online in the world… somewhere? Those who can afford them, learn and teach in larger boxes? The most famous of them give master classes and the rest have subscriptions to intellectual property hubs and knowledge databases like YouTube, Netflix and Disney+? Some would say, “Bring it on!” Others would say, “Bleak!” I am kind of like that Lorax fellow (although my friends might say my hair is bigger!) who says, “Well, what about public education? Who is going to speak for the billions of children born into this world which may soon look like a combination of The Matrix and Idiocracy?”We are in an existential crisis as social media, global internet access, and education are colliding. Which is happening — right now. We need a practical solution in schools that helps youth gain perspective — in real time — to their rapidly changing and evolving lives. Students need a break from screens, phones and computers that actually interest them and work on them at the same time. With youth access to the internet and social media’s presence ballooning in their minds, the need for more life-skills is absolute. Generally, on the fringe of public education, and in many private schools, life-skills classes are coming — if at all— in the form of mindfulness, personal budgeting and wilderness education. And yet, we need more. We need something that is happening in the room — not just inside the student in stillness, online in a bank, or outside in the forest. And we need it soon as part of the main curriculum. I have seen nothing hold learners attention off screen longer than role-playing games (RPGs). And my classes are 4 hours long minimum. Parents try to put me off and say, “Yeah right, my kid can’t be without her phone for more than 15 minutes.” Those same kids don’t want to leave after the 4 hour class, lunch break and after school hours. Educators know that nothing moves fast in curriculum development, but when a wave builds and enough people get behind it, something new can happen. This is RPGs in Schools. This is regeneration, but not the Swamp Thing or Wolverine kind, this is the plant trillions of trees and nurture them kind of regeneration. And kids are resisting moving as fast as we are anyway. They are happy to be in the present moment and be part of something growing inside them and outside. Their way of letting us know we don’t get it? “Ok boomer.” When my own teenager shot back at me in a sudden triggered rage the other night that the “Earth was for rent”, I remembered saying the same thing to my parents in the late 80’s. Part of what saved me then were RPGs, but they were fringe and no one could conceive of how to implement them in schools. Well, life has come back around and more teachers are reaching into their passions and bringing them into the classrooms with the consent of parents and administrators doing anything they can to keep learners engaged as more charter schools, homeschools and alternative schools pop up each year.We need places for students to fail and succeed, but not where their grade point averages (GPAs) and social status are on the line. This is what schools are struggling with all over the world. In some nations or school boards, they clamp down with an iron fist and run their schools like penitentiaries. All this accomplishes is sending suppressed young people out into the world and the workforce with broken identities conditioned to doubt themselves and seek external validation. We reap what we sow. We need to plant different seeds in schools and in teachers. Role-playing games are seeds that have the DNA of full-blown world building. Teacher-gamers are figuring out how to pass on wisdom, how to be the RNA, so to speak, of modeling and developing life-skills. We are working out how to be the messengers between making connections to the students’ full potential and 1. unfolding narrative elements 2. understanding character relations and story arcs 3. unpacking conflict 4. negotiating meaning so that perception is aligned 5. witnessing both failure and success as valued experience 6. learning how to play (games) as an adult* * “playing” and “playing games” may seem like something people know how to do, however it is not a given. Being a “good sport” is not in everyone’s DNA and there are so many factors for why people are ‘poor losers’ or disrespectful winners. With the amount of communication and collaboration that is required to play this game, one goes on a journey of social discovery and navigating relationships that changes them forever. That is another reason why teaching role-playing games is teaching life-skills. If discrete games, drills and assignments that work on the content of a class are flowers, bushes and vegetables in a garden, then trees are our living databases of knowledge upon which fruits and nuts they produce fuel our minds, projects and future. When learners are nourished by what they produce and realize, we see wisdom reflected in their eyes — they are happy, inspired, and satisfied. How do we keep them coming back, excited to dig deeper roots in the garden, to really take ownership of the orchard? This has always been the question for educators, curriculum builders and education philosophers. And we have tried many approaches. Now with the internet and the ability to share styles, results, findings, research and educational methods, globally, we are all still trying to find the perfect curriculum. However, there is no silver bullet, because of three complex reasons — economic, political and cultural — that mandate any given society’s public education model. The first reason is economic, because whatever that society uses as its labor, manufacturing, services and trade models, considers education as a means to attain its economic goals. There is so much interest in what suits the job market, that students are funneled through an educational system that depends on money to turn the economy. This becomes political, because education is funded through public taxation and therefore the over-arching political system dictates or democratizes the direction of curriculum. And finally, the cultural outlook of the society, with its superstitions or lack of religious dogma may or may not affect censure and who can go to school in the first place. What better place to explore and appreciate the above three conditions of education in society then in a role-playing game that simulates a fictional society where players are urged to consider the implications of, and can pull the strings of, economic, political and cultural qualities. In this sense, role-playing games allows you to investigate how society works without any real-world consequences. Risks and consequences are all played out within the game. We are at the cross-roads of the future of education. If we dump billions of dollars, euros, yuan and rupiah into EdTech and AI, it is more than likely that student class sizes will increase, more students will study online and humans will rely more on machines to assess, partition and “teach” students. If EdTech and AI fall into weaponizing human talents, the future itself may come to look like Cyberpunk 2077. However, if we poured a significant portion of that education budget into training more teachers, having smaller class sizes and developing life-skills programs using role-playing games, we would run the chance of developing stronger teacher-student relationships and deeper bonds between kids and their parents. The future is hard to imagine, but hopefully we can clean our act up to the point that we enjoy being a multi-planet species, with cities that look more like global expos of entrepreneur pavilions, sustainable communities, spacious schools connected to well-being sports centers surrounded by agro-forests. How about simulating that in RPGs in Schools? #teachergamer #wildmindtraining #rpgsinschools — — - Zachary Reznichek is a life-skills trainer and teacher-gamer running courses between North America, Europe and South East Asia. Instagram: teachergamerhandbook For more on teacher-gamers visit www.wildmindtraining.com or write to contact@teachergamer.com The Teacher-Gamer Handbook is HERE.

Implementation steps

Administrators

Check out this video:

https://youtu.be/TOU90iP2VJY

Role-Play Gamify regular table-top games
Take a typical game that everyone plays and find a way to make a story out of it. Move competitive games from keeping track of points to generating origin stories and reasons why things are happening in the game. For example, in Settlers of Catan, where are you settling & where are you from? What is the name of your family and what are they known for? What does the color your pieces symbolize? Give each other bonuses for cool story-telling. Check it: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PPekXIgI4g4
Intro new games weekly- RPGify more advanced games
Get more complex with games and give students new games every week. Have them figure out the rules in groups and introduce new games to each other. Have them create stories and RPGify games in a way that moves away from competition and more towards cooperation. Here is an example of how complex a regular table-top game can get... https://youtu.be/c1UG4maOjO4
Find a Teacher-Gamer in your school staff
There are Teacher-Gamers everywhere, but you might need to look more closely within your staff at school. Or invite teachers to play games together from your school or other nearby schools. One fun way to do it is to invite NGOs and Social Enterprises to visit your school and share their expertise so everyone can learn more skills and get more insight into what is happening locally. For example: https://youtu.be/o5egv-IIB4I
More Creative Writing- Character & World Building
Start building characters with your students and let them choose to be fantastic and interesting. Guide them to realize what skills their characters would know based on where their characters grew up, by helping them to understand the economics of imports and exports from cities. Here is a good place to get started: https://youtu.be/neEkgBxvPro
Develop lesson plans with a co-teacher gamer
Get the tools you need to run a robust Role-Playing Games experience. One of the best ways is to co-teach with another Teacher-Gamer. You can also get the Teacher-Gamer Handbook, but the key really is to be a teacher first, so you know how inject the learning opportunities into games that you learn to play and therefore teach others to play. https://youtu.be/NOdnQMx74Kg
Bring things that motivate you into the classroom
Figure out how to put authentically motivating material into the curriculum. Make sure you fulfill the objectives of the curriculum, but make it creative and enjoy yourself while inspiring teachers and students around you. https://youtu.be/n9fTqXwL-Jg

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