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President backs 'STEM Video Game Challenge'DVDBack23 @ Sep 17, 2010 03:21 | 26 comments
Says the President: "Our success as a nation depends on strengthening America's role as the world's engine of discovery and innovation. I applaud partners in the National STEM Video Game Challenge for lending their resources, expertise, and their enthusiasm to the task of strengthening America's leadership in the 21st century by improving education in science, technology, engineering and math."
There are two categories for game developers, the "Developer Prize" for developers creating games aimed at children aged 4-9, and the "Youth Prize" for actual kid developers aged 10-13.
The top reward in the "Developer Prize" is $50,000. Other prizes inlcude "a Collegiate Prize of $25K for the best undergraduate or graduate student submission" and a "prize of $25K for the best submission that has the greatest potential to reach undeserved populations."
Adds Michael Gallagher of the ESA: "Video games are improving and advancing the way Americans are living, working and playing. The acknowledgement and appreciation of President Obama, our partners in this campaign and leading child advocates, is a strong endorsement of the amazing potential and benefit that games can have on children."
The STEM challenge will accept all entries from October 12th until January 5th.
If you are interested in entering, check the official site here: National STEM Video Game Challenge |
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Comment by: flyingpen (Sep 17, 2010 03:38) Finally something Obama did right.
Carpe Noctem
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Comment by: hikaricor (Sep 17, 2010 03:59) Originally posted by flyingpen: 1 in 1000 is still really really bad. |
Comment by: themind (Sep 17, 2010 05:00) better then bush...
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Comment by: KillerBug (Sep 17, 2010 08:41) Yup...they are all the same scum. Don't believe that they are enemies; they all work towards the same goal; only their paths are different.
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Comment by: wiimatrix (Sep 17, 2010 13:02) Originally posted by KillerBug: Absolutely. |
Comment by: DXR88 (Sep 17, 2010 13:09) for someone that didn't read the Global Financial Defecate and how to get out hand book, he sure thinks he know's what he's doing all the while schools are laying of teachers, cutting budgets for needed equipment and teacher pay & benefits. Yes let our government teach you children for they are all knowing.
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Comment by: baxter00 (Sep 17, 2010 13:43) BTW...Mr Obama has done many thing correctly during his reign...every morning he ties his shoes, puts on a suit, brushes his teeth, and does any number of other things very well. It is just that whole "running a country" bit that he has trouble with.
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Comment by: Mysttic (Sep 17, 2010 14:28) Originally posted by KillerBug: Yes but can many others do much better, could you? I couldn't. It's not easy running a country, because yea its the top seat but you still have rules to follow and people that still need to agree with you to get shit done. You can't please everyone, and that's the toughest thing about being President. Now I not saying he good or bad, nor will I comment on Bush. Obviously there are some Presidents better than others, but in the end every single one of em did something to piss off the majority of the nation at one point. I guess my point is, in Obama's shoes, he's doing the best he can with what he was given. |
Comment by: DVDBack23 (Sep 17, 2010 14:58) Originally posted by Mysttic: Agree with everything here, Obama was given a country on the verge of collapse. We'd be complaining (today, 2 years later) no matter if McCain was president, if Arnold Schwarzenegger was president or if a talking dog was president.
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Comment by: pcrazy99 (Sep 17, 2010 15:19) I agree with the majority of the comments here. Every President inherits the mistakes of his predecessors. Obama's Presidency was doomed to one term from the start. The people that voted for him didn't understand that "change" doesn't happen overnight. When the housing situation, unemployment and the ongoing wars weren't resolved quickly they turned on him. I don't agree with a lot of his policies, but I understand the situation he is in. Unfortunately, everybody who voted him into office doesn't see this.
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Comment by: llongtheD (Sep 17, 2010 22:31) Originally posted by baxter00:
@baxter00
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Comment by: DXR88 (Sep 17, 2010 22:38) Originally posted by llongtheD: @baxter00
they can't afford books. cheap labor, in the form of a competition now that works.
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Comment by: Mysttic (Sep 17, 2010 22:41) Quote: There isn't anything wrong with cracking open a book; I don't think Obama or this article is saying lets replace our education system with video game learning. It's simply adding a medium or rather another tool to learn from. When done right video games can actually teach you a lot. Hell I really got into reading books after I started playing RPGs on Nintendo back in the 80s. So I can throw the question back at you, what's wrong with using video games as an added learning tool?
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Comment by: llongtheD (Sep 17, 2010 22:55) Originally posted by Mysttic: I agree with what your saying, and wasn't trying to imply that Obama was saying replace our system with video game learning. Hopefully in the years/decades to come it doesn't become the primary tool. I just think there is more room for free thought, when not guided by software.
If your fish seems sick, put it back in the water.
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Comment by: Pop_Smith (Sep 18, 2010 03:58) Originally posted by Mysttic: I agree with everything here as well. The thing I hate most about critics is that 99.9999% of them just complain until they are blue-in-the-face. They've never been in the position before, they almost never offer suggestions to fix the problem and when the problem is fixed they aren't grateful instead they just start on the next "issue".
http://www.megavideo.com/?v=V1VZAD0O <-- Brian Regan "Take Luck" video.
"The only people who should buy Monster cable are people who light cigars with Benjamins." - Gizmodo |
Comment by: Pop_Smith (Sep 18, 2010 03:58) Originally posted by Mysttic: I agree with everything here as well. The thing I hate most about critics is that 99.9999% of them just complain until they are blue-in-the-face. They've never been in the position before, they almost never offer suggestions to fix the problem and when the problem is fixed they aren't grateful instead they just start on the next "issue".
http://www.megavideo.com/?v=V1VZAD0O <-- Brian Regan "Take Luck" video.
"The only people who should buy Monster cable are people who light cigars with Benjamins." - Gizmodo |
Comment by: KillerBug (Sep 18, 2010 04:35) They are catering to kids 4-9...most of them can hardly read at all (US education is not great), and spend most of their mental power just reading the words...not actually learning the message they are reading.
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Comment by: llongtheD (Sep 18, 2010 05:54) @killerbug
If your fish seems sick, put it back in the water.
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Comment by: KillerBug (Sep 18, 2010 08:02) "To inject a little conspiracy theory, if these games ever become a primary tool for
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Comment by: llongtheD (Sep 18, 2010 10:19) "If you fear that video games might brainwash children by only leaving them a few paths, then you should sit through a few of the classes where children are allowed only one path; and it is a dead-end."
If your fish seems sick, put it back in the water.
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Comment by: chanulus (Sep 19, 2010 04:43) Originally posted by KillerBug: School in WoW. Thank you, that made my day. Would it be a snow day if the servers are down? |
Comment by: sui-cyco (Sep 19, 2010 15:31) I smell a setup.. *sniff* *sniff*. Noway, anybody could resist a shot a Obama, lol. To the point, Obama knows nothing about gaming(just to add to a list of things Obama knows nothing about). The games that would be created would totally suck and nobody would like. And how much "resource" is this STEM program lending? Are they gonna totally teach someone to make a video game? Man, I would love free training on complex video game making. But i doubt they would have the resource to TEACH someone how to do it. More than likely they will give a quick instruction guide with some generic game making software. Looks good on paper but will be a bunch of crock when implemented.
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Comment by: lawndog (Sep 20, 2010 05:52) What the heck. I bought my ex's daughter this little gameing system that looked like the old Nintendo 64 console. Cartiges looked about the same. Bought about 15 20 games, Dora, Blues Clues, Disney a whole bunch of various things. And they where all educational. Now granted this would fall under the 4-7 age range, but still, this stuff is already out there. The only reason this is making news is because Obama needs some positive press. (Which every president uses) (Although I can't stand Obama and his pass the buck blame while Bush sat there and took all the hate that got tossed at him)Back to the point sorry..... This stuff is out there, nobody pays attention to it though because it's not Nintendo, Playstation, or Microsoft, oh, and its not backed by the president.
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Comment by: themind (Sep 20, 2010 06:18) Leap Frog?
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Comment by: ThePastor (Sep 21, 2010 01:43) Quote:
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