AJI Report #19 | Scott K Davis and his son Tommy on Gamification and Programming for Kids

Posted by Jeff Julian on Geeks with Blogs See other posts from Geeks with Blogs or by Jeff Julian
Published on Tue, 13 Nov 2012 19:53:29 GMT Indexed on 2012/11/13 23:02 UTC
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Scott K Davis

We are very excited about this show. John and Jeff sat down with Scott Davis and his son Tommy to talk about Gamification and Programming for Kids. Tommy is nine years old and the Iowa Code Camp was his second time presenting. Scott and Tommy introduce a package called Scratch that was developed by MIT to teach kids about logic and interacting with programming using sprites. Tommy's favorite experience with programming right now is Lego Mindstorms because of the interaction with the Legos and the development. Most adults when they get started with development also got started with interacting more with the physical machines. The next generation is given amazing tools, but the tools tend to be sealed and the physical interaction is not there. With some of these alternative hobby platforms like Legos, Arduino, and .NET Micro Framework, kids can write some amazing application and see their code work with physical movement and interaction with devices and sensors.

In the second half of this podcast, Scott talks about how companies can us Gamification to prompt employees to interact with software and processes in the organization. We see gamification throughout the consumer space and you need to do is open up the majority of the apps on our phones or tablets and there is some interaction point to give the user a reward for using the tool. Scott gets into his product Qonqr which is described as the board game Risk and Foursquare together. Scott gets into the different mindsets of gamers (Bartle Index) and how you can use these mindsets to get the most out of your team through gamification techniques.

Listen to the Show

Site: http://scottkdavis.com/
Twitter: @ScottKDavis
LinkedIn: ScottKDavis

Scratch: http://scratch.mit.edu/
Lego Mindstorms: http://mindstorms.lego.com/
Bartle Test: Wikipedia
Gamification: Wikipedia

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