One of the things that often makes Imagine Cup entries a good educational experience is that they require planning and team work. A good Imagine Cup entry is seldom a one person project. Many universities use the Imagine Cup, especially the Software Design event, as senior projects. The Game Event makes a great team project even earlier in ones education however. Pat Yongpradit has been using the Imagine Cup Game Design event as a group project for several years now. He’s had a team make it as far as the US Finals in that category. This is quite an accomplishment as most of the competitors are university students. Still, he has great students and is an outstanding teacher. For the Fall round of the US game competition he has 8 teams of students who have entered and submitted for round one. Recently he shared some of the documents he uses with his students.
What I have copied below is the schedule and role breakdown that he is using this year. I would imagine that in many teams the work is not as strictly broken down as these but even there this document serves as a great description of what needs to be done and by when. Getting high school students to not wait until the last minute can be a challenge as any teacher or parent of high school students can readily attest. This means that making deadlines clear is critical as are intermediate status checks.
Pat is also having his students write reflections at the end of each phase. Each team member completes and individual reflection and the group as a whole does a second reflection in a discussion lead by the student manager. (I have copies of his Phase 1 reflections that Pat told me I could share with interested teachers. AlfredTh (at) Microsoft.com if interested) A number of teachers I have talked to over the years have found the goal of completing a big project for entry into a competition can serve as a good motivator for students. Adding the value of teamwork, planning and examination of the project/plan against results makes this a very complete learning experience. Maybe it will work for you as well? This is the year I really want to see a high school team not just do well at the US level (a HS team came in third in the US last year) but go all the way to the world-wide finals in Australia (this year’s venue.) If you decide to try this with your students (there is a new US round in the spring) let me know if I can help.
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