Nintendo Reaching Out to Teachers in UK

By Adam Riley 03.06.2008 4

The organisers of this years Handheld Learning Conference in October will give Teachers that attend free Nintendo DS systems with a copy of Dr Kawashima's Brain Training.

The conference, now in its fourth year, explores how technologies that are becoming common place in the lives of young people are also being used for powerful learning experiences both in and out of the school.

"Providing teachers with free Nintendo DS Lite's is not intended to be a gimmick, we expect our delegates to use them during the conference and experience an environment that would typically not be allowed in a classroom."
- Graham Brown-Martin, founder of Handheld Learning.

The 3 day event, running from 13th-15th October, is the largest of its kind and brings together many of the world's leading education experts, school leaders and policy makers as well as parents and children to explore the convergence between consumer electronics, entertainment software, educational technology and learning.

The opening day of the conference is free to the general public and features a range of activities including an exhibition, seminars, games and competitions followed by an awards party in the evening.

Speakers including popular science writer, Steven Johnson, social media scientist, danah boyd, former Xerox Corp chief scientist, John Seely Brown, writer, Marc Prensky, learning visionary, Stephen Heppell, Futurelab research director, Keri Facer, mobile learning guru, Mike Sharples and MIT's chief learning architect, David Cavallo will join Andrew Pinder, CBE, chairman of Becta.

"We are proud to be supporting this important event once again and look forward to hearing from the some of the world's leading thinkers in the field of learning. With over 70 million DS units in peoples hands we are genuinely interested in the positive impact that they can have for self-improvement and collaborative learning."
- Darren Gorton, Business Development Director for Nintendo.

The event is supported by UK government agency, Becta, along with industry support from Nintendo and Apple.

Box art for Dr Kawashima's Brain Training: How Old Is Your Brain?
Also known as

Brain Age: Train Your Brain in Minutes a Day!

Developer

Nintendo

Publisher

Nintendo

Genre

Educational

Players

1

C3 Score

Rated $score out of 10  8/10

Reader Score

Rated $score out of 10  9/10 (6 Votes)

European release date Out now   North America release date Out now   Japan release date Out now   Australian release date Out now   

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Comments

"Hi teachers, we here at Nintendo know how much you're paid, so we're going to spoil you even more! :3"

Twitter | C3 Writer/Moderator | Backloggery

SuperLink said:
"Hi teachers, we here at Nintendo know how much you're paid, so we're going to spoil you even more! :3"

YUP!

Bowser. You Booz, you lose.

I take it that\'s sarcasm, Superlink?

I was reading about how poverty is defined by looking at earnings compared with a nation\'s median income. I can\'t remember what the median is for the UK, but as a teacher in my second year of teaching I am well below it!

However, the important question is: how do I get a ticket?

( Edited 03.06.2008 22:17 by chrisjwilkinson )

Can any teacher get one?Smilie My mate would be well chuffed.Smilie Where abouts is it?

Also, teachers don't get paid enough with the crap they have to put up with from certain students. Plus the amount of work they have to do. Half of it after school hours. (Like homework but more.)

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