Connection in Video Games and Literacy

My Thesis Committee Chair, SuAnne, suggested that I read up on linguist James Paul Gee and his book, “What Video Games Have to Teach Us About Learning and Literacy” about certain the idea of how the notion of “value” is often perceived differently by different people.

In the book, Gee points out that video games go beyond just helping children with their hand-eye coordination. Rather, the whole idea of video gaming requires a different kind of literacy — the kind that’s not even taught in schools these days. A good example he used was a simple sentence in basketball lingo. To someone who doesn’t understand the sport, s/he would simply read the sentence literally and superficially, completely missing the underlying message about the strategy or situation in which the basketball players are engaged in. On the other hand, to someone who is “literate” of basketball lingo, the seemingly simple sentence is much more profound and interesting.

The same can be applied in video gaming. Gee argues that each and every video game requires a different set of learning and literacy aquisition. Children understand the notion of themselves as the main character in the game. And they understand the difference in fantacy and reality (i.e. they are the character in the game but return to being themselves outside of the game). Furthermore, as game consoles become more and more sophisticated, so are the games. And they demand steeper learning curves. But children aren’t discouraged from playing them. Why? Because they are engaging, and they present problem solving possibilities that are simply not available in most schools.

Take for example, a game Gee’s six-year-old plays presents a few possibilities in confronting a sleeping enemy — wake him and confront him head on, sneak pass the enemy without awakening him or confront him and recruits help from other characters. This kind of problem solving skill is more engaging and involves critical thinking and planning. Compare that to what is being taught in typical American schools (I assume he was talking about schools in America), teachers and administrators are so stressed over testing and result-driven curriculum that they just want to get the “basics” down — reading, writing and arithmetic. But how do they apply the skills to the bigger picture of social literacy (which is a big theme in the book)? Children have learned to read and write so they can test well. But can they truly read and write in the social and interpersonal context?

Gee also reminds readers about what video game means to different generations of people. To the baby boomers, video games are a waste of time. And he’s not surprised. But he points out who are they to judge video games when they can’t even understand the literacy required to understand and play the games? He argues that this is where the problem is: People who don’t value social and inter/inner-personal literacy in children are making all the policies in education and running the schools. It’s no wonder that kids are failing at schools but doing exceptionally well when it comes to the most challenging games available. That makes the game designers the master teachers today, Gee concludes.

At one point the author ponders on an interesting question: What does it mean to have a rapper who can rap but can’t read or write? How does the academic world see someone who can rhythm but can’t read sheet music? Are they any more crippled than kids who can read and write but can’t pick up the meanings between the lines of songs that depict social issues?

James Paul Gee is a linguist and educator. Coming from points of views of liguistic development (in a broader sense) and education, he makes the book that much more interesting. Unfortunately the edition I read is plagued with misspellings and ongoing babel on certain points that make the reading a little distracting and confusing. But all in all, just the first two chapters alone are worth reading (the rest of the book is about his learning theories).

Server Problems

Our server in Texas went down in the afternoon yesterday and didn’t get back up until pretty late last night. That was pretty annoying. I can only imagine what kind of mail failed to deliver during the down time. So I hopped on over to Roller Network and set up a back up MX record to hold and deliver emails in case my server misbehaves again. Roller Network provides free back up DNS and MX service.

After this experience, I think I am going to set up a rsync scheduler to back up all mine and my clients’ data on our spare Mac’s hard drive at home soon. Growing pains of small business… The operation is big enough to warrant its own server but not profitable enough to set up a redundancy system for down times like the one we experienced.

UPDATE 02/07/2006: Roller Network provides an awesome log of messages delivered through its system. It turns out that my mail server sometimes does take longer to respond (due to all the spams it has to sniff through) and some emails ended up delivering through Roller Network. It turns out that its delivery mechanism identifies and blocks known spam emails!! Wow!

via [Broobles Blog]

Teething Pains

Teething must be an annoying process. Bryan wakes up several times every night; we think it’s because of the discomfort from teething. Using our pinkies gently rubbing against his gum lines seems to make him feel better. But it really hurts when he bites down hard with his only two teeth…

Every now and then, I look at Bryan and all I can do is appreciate the wonders of evolution and “nature”. Everything has a purpose and was evovled (or some may argue that it was “designed” ) for a specific purpose. For instance, all ten human fingers were grown just the right sizes for everything a human has to do; the index finger fits perfect in the nasal cavity and you can’t poke deep enough to hurt yourself with it. The same thing with the pinky and the ear. And the thumbs are just the right sizes to work with the other four fingers on each hand. Even with the technologies we have today, engineers and scientists are still struggling to duplicate the most basic mechanisms of life (i.e. walking, running… etc). And let’s not forget we are nowhere near duplicating the capabilities of one-cell organisms given how much we know about them. All the brilliance that’s built into nature!

My latest facination is the growth of Bryan’s teeth — they slowly emerge above the gum and yet somehow they shed no blood in the process. Furthermore, somehow human genes figured out the appropriate age for our first set of teeth to fall off and grow new ones to replace them with… Only if genetists can figure out how to manipulate that growth in adults when our teeth go bad. Then we simply get rid of the bad teeth and grow new ones! Overnight, the dynamics of the dentistry business would be transformed.

Speaking of dentistry… My last visit to the dentist made me realize just how much waste each patient’s visit generates: at least two to four sets of disposable gloves, masks, bibs, unused fillings, sanitation pouches… etc. No wonder it’s such a huge business to be in.

Evolution of Cats

Carl Zimmer writes yet another greart article about the evolution of cats (in relation to other felines). Carl Zimmer is actually really good scientific writer.

An excerpt…

The scientists were able to reconstruct the evolutionary tree of cats with a great deal of statistical confidence. Their results are published in this week’s Science (link here). I’ve put the illustrations from the paper at the bottom for those who like to revel in the gorey details. What’s particularly neat about the paper is that it offers a hypothesis for how cats spread around the world. The researchers came up with this hypothesis by looking at where cats are today, and then mapping their locations onto the evolutionary tree.

The common ancestor of all living cats, according to their results, lived in Asia about ten million years ago. This cat’s descendants split into two branches. One led to lions, jaguars, tigers, leapards, snow leopards, and cloud leopards. The other branch gave rise to all other cats. These early cats remained in Asia until 8.5 million years ago, when new lineages moved into the New World and Africa. The New World immigrants gave rise to bobcats, couggars, lynxes, ocelots, bobcats, and other species found in the Western Hemisphere today. The African migrants were the ancestors of today’s servals and other small cat species.

But cats have a way of wandering. The ancestors of domestic cats moved back from North America back into Asia around 6.5 million years ago. Lynxes moved back as well about 2 million years ago, spreading west until they reached Spain. The ancestors of today’s mountain lions in the New World also produced another lineage that moved back into Asia and eventually wound up in Africa, where it became today’s cheetahs. Other big cats moved into Africa at around the same time–the cousins of tigers and snow leopards in Asia moved through the Sinai peninsula and evolved into African lions. But close cousins of the lions moved into the New World, evolving into jaguars.

Wasp Slaves Zombie Roaches

This is a pretty cool article about how a species of wasp evolved into a slave master, chemically controlling roaches to become hosts of its larvae. Yuck…

As an adult, Ampulex compressa seems like your normal wasp, buzzing about and mating. But things get weird when it’s time for a female to lay an egg. She finds a cockroach to make her egg’s host, and proceeds to deliver two precise stings. The first she delivers to the roach’s mid-section, causing its front legs buckle. The brief paralysis caused by the first sting gives the wasp the luxury of time to deliver a more precise sting to the head.

The wasp slips her stinger through the roach’s exoskeleton and directly into its brain. She apparently use ssensors along the sides of the stinger to guide it through the brain, a bit like a surgeon snaking his way to an appendix with a laparoscope. She continues to probe the roach’s brain until she reaches one particular spot that appears to control the escape reflex. She injects a second venom that influences these neurons in such a way that the escape reflex disappears.

From the outside, the effect is surreal. The wasp does not paralyze the cockroach. In fact, the roach is able to lift up its front legs again and walk. But now it cannot move of its own accord. The wasp takes hold of one of the roach’s antennae and leads it–in the words of Israeli scientists who study Ampulex–like a dog on a leash.

Pretty sickening but amazing stuff…

via [Slashdot]

Thesis Draft Completed

After having dragged my MFA thesis for five fricking years, I finally completed the core writing part of the paper today. Even though it only took me a few hours to set up the structure and layout of the paper, the writing took a lot longer because too much has been going on in the past month and a half. It took me about a day to write the first 1/3 of the paper, the rest kept getting dragged on because I had to figure out what I needed to do with the project itself. And once the project requirements took shape, the rest was just a matter of putting ink to the paper (so to speak).

The most trouble I had with the paper was locating some of the resources I needed. Just the MLA format alone was hard to pin down because each website I Googled has a slightly different way of doing certain things. Jason said that’s because MLA changes its format slightly with every edition it publishes.

My tolerance for MLA is about to rip.

But regardless of the formats, I found a pretty awesome website that generates all the appropriate structures and in-text citings for you, provided you give them the right information — EasyBib (short for “easy bibliography” I think; there’s no fee for generating bibliographies; but not free for more advanced stuff). The next best thing is DianaHacker.com. It has a very complete documentation of how each type of structure should be used in different types of papers. But it is still confusing when I find things that easybib.com and dianahacker.com don’t agree on…

Now that the thesis is almost done, maybe I should try to book a ticket to Savannah just so that I can take care of the rest of the paperwork in person. The winter quarter ends on March 9th. I am cutting it pretty close having to revise the paper and the project, get everything signed by everyone on the thesis committee, get everything to the library for archival and make sure nothign slips through…

I can’t wait to taste the sweet joy of getting that Master of Fine Arts diploma and never have to hear my mom nag about it again… FOREVER!

I sent the paper for everyone on the thesis committee to go over. Now I can spend the weekend reviewing for my accounting exam for next Wednesday… I am so screwed in that class… Stupid accounting…

Sprout of the Second Tooth

Bryan’s second tooth just emerged, barely above the surface of the gum, right next to his first tooth.

Baby tooth are so cute. His first tooth is not even fully grown out yet.

Speaking of tooth, I went to the dentist again today. But I had to go to a different one because the first guy I went to is not covered under my individual dental plan… What a hassle (but I like my new dentist better than the last guy anyway; she was a lot more thorough and took the time to answer my questions). So I had to go through the X-ray, full cavity check up and the whole deal again. But the good thing was that I did all of that plus tooth cleaning, and the visit only cost me $25. That in itself paid for the insurance premium I paid for the entire year. (I encouraged Grace to make an appointment as well.)

The verdict… similar to the last visit…

Today’s Visit
Copay per visit: w/o insurance: $85; w/ insurance: $5
Complete check up: w/o insurance: $90; w/ insurance: $0
Full-mouth X-Ray: w/o insurance: $176; w/ insurance: $0
Mouth cleaning: w/o insurance: $118; w/ insurance: $20

Total paid: $25 (or $469 w/o insurance)
(Insurance paid for the whole year covering both me and Grace: $170 )

—-
Recommended Treatments
Tooth #2 (cavity) — w/o insurance: $230; w/ insurance: $102
Tooth #6 (cavity) — w/o insurance: $242; w/ insurance: $75
Tooth #8 (chipped) — not covered: $307; discount: $199.55
Tooth #9 (old chipped) — not covered: $307; discount: $199.55
Tooth #20 (cavity) — w/o insurance: $390; w/ insurance: $205
Tooth #29 (cavity) — w/o insurance: $304; w/ insurance: $145

Total w/o insurance: $1.780 (compared to $1,680 from the other clinic)
Total w/ insurance: $926.10 (Yay… 48% savings… )

Having a dental insurance is a good thing.

Alicia to the Rescue

Monday was an eventful day. After trying for a week to get Baobao on pills and flea drops, Grace decided it was time to send her to the pros at the vet clinic. Little did we know, even they couldn’t handle Baobao’s aggressive attitude towards strangers. Not long after Grace dropped her off, she got a call from the vet’s office to pick her up… By then, I was already on my way to Valleyjo for my consulting gig.

Grace had to call Alicia to get a rid to the vet’s office to pick up Baobao because the loaner car from Michelle couldn’t fit Bryan’s car seat. And thankfully, Alicia was able to rush to San Jose all the way from Menlo Park to fetch Baobao. After hours of hissing and restlessness in her cage, Baobao meowed with a relief when she heard Grace calling her name.

Unfortunately, Baobao never learned her lesson; she’s still difficult to handle when it comes to feeding her pills. So this time we got a different brand of flea drop (Advantage, which supposedly works far better than Hartz, the first brand we tried) and continued our quest to be rid of the fleas.

MLA Style Rant

Whoever came up with the MLA Style is an idiot. There are so many different ways of citing different sources that it requires a fricking handbook to write a paper. As if writing the paper is not enough labor, the institutions all buy into the worst form of cource citing and bibliography using the MLA Style. Shouldn’t source citing be more intuitive and uses common sense than having to master the MLA Style itself as an art form?

Argh! Stupid MLA Style…