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How Minecraft Is Helping Kids Fall In Love With Books (theguardian.com) 35

An anonymous reader quotes a report from The Guardian: Robert Louis Stevenson's 1881 classic Treasure Island tells of Jim Hawkins's adventures on board the Hispaniola, as he and his crew -- along with double-crossing pirate Long John Silver -- set out to find Captain Flint's missing treasure on Skeleton Island. Now, more than a century later, children can try and find it themselves, with the bays and mountains of Stevenson's fictional island given a blocky remodeling in Minecraft, as part of a new project aimed at bringing reluctant readers to literary classics. From Spyglass Hill to Ben Gunn's cave, children can explore every nook and cranny of Skeleton Island as part of Litcraft, a new partnership between Lancaster University and Microsoft, which bought the game for $2.5 billion in 2015 and which is now played by 74 million people each month. The Litcraft platform uses Minecraft to create accurate scale models of fictional islands: Treasure Island is the first, with Michael Morpurgo's Kensuke's Kingdom just completed and many others planned. [...] The project, which is featured on Microsoft's Minecraft.edu website, is currently being presented to school teachers and librarians across the UK. There has been "an enthusiastic response" to the trials under way in local schools, with plans to roll Litcraft out to libraries in Lancashire and Leeds from October 2018.
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How Minecraft Is Helping Kids Fall In Love With Books

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  • Any plans to model some after R'lyeh or the dungeons beneath Toledo?
  • by Anonymous Coward

    I can't wait for a Lord of the Flies version

  • by Anonymous Coward

    I hope those kids don't learn the common vice of the "OMG books" crowd and start congratulating themselves for their entertainment preferences. Books are no better or worse than other entertainment choices.

    Reading is good and educational, but being social is good too and other entertainments are better for that. You're not better than other people because you read for entertainment.

    Also, good newer books are not worse than "classics". Classics are mostly only classics because they were good when there wa

    • I certainly agree. Loudly talking during the movie in the theatre is more 'social' and thus of greater value. Yeah, uh-huh.

    • Classics are mostly only classics because they were good when there was less competition.

      No. Books become classics by outliving the era they were written for. Treasure Island, written in 1881, is still popular today. The Rover Boys Series, written between 1899 and 1926 is almost forgotten today because it was too much a product of its own time for today's boys to relate to. That doesn't mean that it's a bad series, just that today's boys would find it hard to relate to the characters or even underst
  • by DatbeDank ( 4580343 ) on Sunday July 15, 2018 @01:12PM (#56952294)

    They do this in all of the in educational games and it's a silly exercise. The kids are playing Minecraft with a hint of Treasure Island. I doubt wholeheartedly they'll pick up the book.

    They could set it up so you have to read the book in order to find the actual treasure, but it's still a gimmicky tie in.

    It's a shame that the best edutainment game out there was the Oregon Trail series. Make more games like this!

    I loved reading these books as a kid because I was fortunate enough to have parents and educators who fostered that in me. I'm continuing to do the same with my children.

    Here's a hint: Maybe stop giving electronics to kids and encourage entertainment elsewhere. You'd be surprised what they find enjoyable. And this coming from a crusty old 30 year old!

    Unrelated and slightly off topic rant: if you think kids need smartphones or laptops with some violent AAA EA title shooter because you're worried about them fitting in, getting lost, or some other convoluted excuse you're a bad parent. Stop letting electronics parent your kids because you're too lazy to encourage proper habits.

    As a parent with two kids already with two working full time adults, and a mortage parenting young children isn't difficult.

    I do see a lot of weak parents out there.

    • You don't say. (Score:5, Insightful)

      by Anonymous Coward on Sunday July 15, 2018 @02:02PM (#56952494)

      As a parent with two kids already with two working full time adults, and a mortage parenting young children isn't difficult.

      I grew up in that environment.

      In school during gym, we were playing softball and I didn't know which way to run bases because my Dad never did that with me. I was bullied over that.

      I have very little coordination because my Dad or Mom didn't play catch or anything with me. (I was picked on for that). I have no "ball sense". They were working. To put food on the table? No. To buy luxury shit. Cars, fur coats, jewelry - shit to out-do the Jones next door.

      When I was struggling in school, they didn't help. They yelled at me to "WORK HARDER!!" No direction ... like work harder how? (Now that I have taken the "how to learn" class on Coursera, I know what to do - at 55 years-old.

      As far as connection to my parents....well, they're kind of strangers. One is dying and frankly, I was more concerned with one of my cats when it was sick and dying.

      I have no memories of playing ball with my Dad or Mom. No happy memories of doing things together. I stay in touch out of duty.

      Dad was always at work to make money to buy shit. I don't even have a legacy - like a million dollar inheritance to think, "OK Mom and Dad, you did this for me."

      The GREATEST thing you can do for you child(ren) is to spend time with them. THAT means more than ANY crap you can BUY.

    • There is a strange phenomenon that I've noticed. When I was a child we were always told that books are for adults. Nowadays, children are reading MORE than adults. Adults are mesmerized by screens, while young enough kids who still haven't got addicted still enjoy picture books more. This does not bode well.

    • Maybe so. Minecraft + the Galacticraft mod would let you re-enact parts of Gravity's Rainbow .. .what's that? You don't want kids reading that filth? Yeesh, make up your minds!

    • Likewise, my impression of educational games is that they're plain old games with the usual addictive logic, with a bit of learning tacked on the side. It's as if the designers start out with the premise that learning != fun. In fact, a designer from Rovio (of Angry Birds fame) described good edutainment as food where you hide the healthy bits within the yummy ones. Because nobody can possibly enjoy veggies or learning, but it's something you have to do, so we'll help you tolerate it. As a teacher who doesn
    • by pots ( 5047349 )

      It's a shame that the best edutainment game out there was the Oregon Trail series. Make more games like this!

      There are some good programming and design games out there. I really liked Mind Rover, but that's quite old now... Carnage Heart, for the PS 1, was in sort of the same vein. I haven't played anything more recent than that, which is pathetic, but I'm sure they probably exist.

      Can anyone offer suggestions?

  • "Treasure Island.mcworld". I can't get it installed on PC, using the basic methods.

    Searching for a PC version, one was taken down in 2015 http://www.minecraftmaps.com/s... [minecraftmaps.com]

  • Books are papery blogs that we had in the stone age, when phones didn't have porn yet,

  • As evidenced:

    Litcraft, a new partnership between Lancaster University and Microsoft, which bought the game for $2.5 billion in 2015 and which is now played by 74 million people each month

    Not like Minecraft wasn't insanely successful before MIcrosoft bought it to start fucking it up or anything.

  • There's always a bit of a panic that kids aren't reading. "Oh no! Kids are watching TV rather than reading!" "Argh! They're playing video games rather than reading!!", "The internet will destroy books!!!"

    People are still reading. Kids still enjoy books. Books are no less enjoyable now than they were years ago. There's no need for gimmicks.
  • To say Microsoft overpaid is an understatement.

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