Teaching Gamedev to Young People (with Truman Simpson)

Nice Games Club - a gamedev podcast! - Podcast készítő Ellen, Stephen, and Mark - Csütörtökök

Kategóriák:

In this episode Truman Simpson joins us to talk about teaching game development to young people, through Gameheads, an organization for which Truman is a long standing volunteer. The clubhouse discusses the importance of seeing what is possible and what is achievable, and Stephen is jealous of today's youths.Teaching Gamedev to Young PeopleGame DesignIRLGameheadsTruman Simpson volunteers with Gameheads. Gameheads is an organization that teaches youth and prepares them for careers in game development. Gameheads is lead by Damon Packwood and operates out of Oakland and the Bay Area, CA, with possible expansions around the US.Gameheads WebsiteGameheads TwitterDamon Packwood's TwitterTruman Simpson's twitterTeaching and Games cross-pollinationEllen mentions that Teaching and Games is a cross-pollination that is a whole other episode, here are some Episodes on that topic from the archivesWe talked about educational institutions for game dev back in episode 16Games Education Ellen joined as a guest host way back in Episode 75Learning Through GamesWe also talked about teaching/learning durring the Redundancy topic in Episode 170"Stephen, his arms wide!" Project SuccessStephen is working with Project Success to design a learning curriculum for middle school aged youths.Project Success WebsiteStephen mentioned design pillars, as one of the learning topics in project sucess, see also episode 187"A way to farm notions."Soylent GreenSoylent Green is set in the year 2022 (that's this year!) and something we got distracted by on a tangent. Yes, soylent is a real product now.In 1973, 'Soylent Green' envisioned the world in 2022.  - George Bass, The Washington PostSoylent (the real productAnd, if the people from Soylent want to sponsor us, please reach out at [email protected] SimpsonGuestTruman Simpson is a person who lives in beautiful Oakland, CA

Visit the podcast's native language site