OT - Elementary School Needs Help!
Its been so long since I've posted that I almost forget how this is done but here goes anyway:
All you gamers, parents, philanthropists, and computer-savy MGoUsers out there might have an interest in this - We are raising funds to replace some computers in a local elementary school in order to create a Minecraft Club for the students there. I set up a crowdsourcing fundraiser campaign on Indiegogo in hopes of generating $7500 for the cause. Below is the link to the campaign:
http://igg.me/at/campdragoncraft/x/11413354
If any of you have any interest in donating, know that it will be greatly appreciated! If not, any time you have to forward the link to friends, family, fellow Michigan fans, and others will also be greatly appreciated. I would be amazing if we can raise enough funds to reach our goal.
Thanks in advance for helping the cause!
Minecraft Club? I'm shaking my fist so hard at this. How about a go outside and play club.
LOL - Its part of a new in-school enrichment program. Lest you worry, there is still recess and gym time. But feel free to shake those fists to your hearts desire!
Congrats on keeping up with your exercises at such an advanced age.
Emma is displaying the fist shaking cardio exercises....
I am sure we can all think of other cardio exercises for Emma to do!
How about a go outside and play club.
Memories of school recent flooding into my mind ... from a long time ago.
o Seeing how high I could get the swing going and then jumping off so I could launch myself way into the air
o Playing marbles*
o Playing a modified game of keep-away ... where he who had the ball was fair game to be tackled as aggressively as possible. Akin to "Peru Ball".
* This was 1969, at Northwest Elementary in Howell ... and it offered a fascinating glimpse into how kids naturally understand relative value and market forces. Purie marbles (clear) had more value than non-clear; jumbo marbles greater than regular sized marbles; and ball bearings ("steelies") the most of all. I had a jumbo steely that I still have to this day.
I was in elementary school in the early 90s and we did a lot of the same things.
That was the exact same name we used for that game back in 1969.
What I wasn't sure of is whether marbles are still a thing. I can see how they'd be considered a choking hazard. Or too old-fashioned for today.
we called it that too. Just didn't want to type it out since it's pretty dreagotary.
and trying to dig a hole to china in the sandbox
I actually sort of wish my kids would play Minecraft in a club-like setting so that they could have technological and social interactions simultaneously, rather than do what they do right now and play each other across a server only to have the game devolve into them trolling each other loudly from different rooms in the house.
Sent from MGoBlog HD for iPhone & iPad
What is minecraft and why is it important for these kids to have access to it? I understand the need to replace computers but I don't know anything about this game.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Minecraft
Minecraft is one of the best-selling video games in history with over 70 million copies sold. Its an open-world game where players can design, create, build, farm, collaborate, explore, etc. Its actually a pretty amazing thing and, as a parent, I've watched my kids do some really cool things with the game. Many magnet schools use it as a teaching tool and that's what we're trying to do here (see http://minecraftedu.com/). But, like you mention, its really a motivator for the bigger task of replacing the computers.
I seem to recall someone posting a minecraft video of a virtual tour of Michigan Stadium. I couldn't find it using the MGoSearch function, but I didn't try real hard.
My son plays minecraft with his friends more than I would like. I wish he'd go outside and shoot some baskets every now and then. My NBA dreams for him aren't going to be realized if he never practices. But he did take a summer course on coding so there was some educational value, I suppose.
Ha, that Ann Arbor one is really well done actually. Where people find the time to do that with such detail, I dunno, although it probably does beat them playing Halo or Madden or whatever.
It makes you feel like a Rockefeller in that you can mold w/e world you want. People love that shit.
Not everyone in the real world has that kind of power lol.
Plus ZOMBIES! :-)
I come home from work and wonder who my son is talking to, only to realize he's watching yet another youtube from that british minecraft guy.
Hopefully each kid will get their own gamer chair....
/jk - Nice of you to help raise money!
LOL yeah that same one. But this time it will actually be in a controlled environment with an eye towards educating, which you might appreciate as a teacher... I'm going to have the kids do research projects on architecture around the world, for example. It could be really enriching - the potential is there.
Sent from MGoBlog HD for iPhone & iPad
Thanks a million! Very cool of you. Very cool indeed!
Sent from MGoBlog HD for iPhone & iPad
Thanks for sharing it with your colleagues, Doc!
I'm 40 and play the hell out of the game with a bunch of other old guys on Teamspeak but I get your point. :-)
I got dizzy and Stevie kept running into walls. I gave up and told the kids to enjoy their 1980's video game.
Maybe North Carolina should raise taxes to increase school funding. They're like 46 out of 50 in per-pupil spending.
Yeah, its really sad. And this school is one of the more worse off in that respect. Charlotte-Mecklenburg Schools are and have been in bad shape for years.
the unwillingness to invest in quality schools and teachers. Public schools should be cathedrals staffed with highly qualified, and paid, educators.
s/
Or perhaps evaluate where existing taxes are being spent and modify as needed. Specifically, expenses for layers of administration that is, likely, not needed. That's a big problem in a lot of places, including universities.
universities.
Sent from MGoBlog HD for iPhone & iPad
My teenage son loved this game and as long as he did well in school and played sports and/or was outside enough, I saw no downside to this activity.
He has graduated on to League of Legends which blows my mind as to how many millions play that game and that 1000's repeatedly fill arenas worldwode to WATCH championship matches.
I can appreciate it, but am frankly lost coming from the Pong/Astroids/ Pac-Man era...
Thank you very much! I'm not a League man myself but I know people who love it.
Its a different world from when we were kids - There are Youtubers that make MILLIONS from recording and uploading videos of them playing video games (PewDiePie made over $7 million last year!). Its insanity but its the world we live in. And Minecraft is actually constructive compared to other games I play so I'm all for my kids playing it as long as they do just like you mention.
is taking a Minecraft class this semester at OSU since he did not go there to play school.