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Games in High School?

Joe Griego of Bishop Union High School, CA asks: "I'm the Director of I.T. for a small school district, and we've implemented a 'Game Night' for our kids. We open the lab once or twice a month, and let the kids sign up for the lab computers (we have 34 of them), and play LAN games until the wee hours. It's a lot of fun for the kids, and I enjoy seeing them use the computers for recreation, as opposed to purely academic purposes. However, my question would be - do other high schools even do this?" Judging by the post-Columbine reactions from the government, parent's groups, school systems, and the media, if a school is doing this, it's probably on the QT. Personally, I think this is a great idea, it keeps kids off of the streets and their parents know where they are. What do you think?

"I'd like to know what sorts of games would be best for this activity? We play Age of Empires II, Starcraft/Broodwar, and MechWarrior IV. I would have liked to include first person shooters (for the gameplay), but I'm limited by parental concerns, and perceptions in the community. As a school administrator and parent, I understand these concerns in a way the kids perhaps do not.

Are there other games that would be suitable for a school sponsored event? I'd love to hear about experiences at other schools."

3 of 781 comments (clear)

  1. Columbia University does by spotter · · Score: 5, Informative

    or at least the CS dept.

    The local ACM chapter sponsers gaming events every so often where we take over one of the labs and have people play lan games. usually tournament style.

    we even take pictures. here are some from a starcraft tournament we held.

    http://www.cs.columbia.edu/acm/pictures/gaming-S C- fa01/

  2. Re:computer capabilities by Blkdeath · · Score: 3, Informative
    > How many schools actually have computers that are good enough to play Unreal Tourney or Age of Empires?

    More than you may realize, actually. The school board I worked for has recently upgraded board-wide to IBM PII 400s, and are slowly upgrading labs towards and beyond the 1GHz marker. The older machines have, typically, generic S3 video chipsets onboard but the newer models are shifting through S3 Savage, Trident, and eventually to nVidia chipsets.

    The Cisco programs for high schools are dandies; the government loves the media hype, local companies (small to corporate) like the initiative, so funding often comes in large amounts from strange sources (while the rest of the school resources are mis-managed and lacking, of course ... ), so Cisco labs would probably be at an advantage.

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  3. Re:In a word... by User+956 · · Score: 4, Informative

    If the school has sufficient funds for computers of this calliber, then perhaps it has spent funds poorly. Give the teachers a raise. Learning typing, word processors, spreadsheets, or programming requires far less capable computers.

    I would say that if a school doesn't have computers better than these requirements, then it spends funds poorly:

    Starcraft/Broodwar:
    Windows 95, 98 or NT 4.0
    Pentium 90MHz or higher
    16MB RAM
    80MB of free hard disk space
    DirectX compatible SVGA video card
    2x CD-ROM drive

    Mechwarrior IV:
    Pentium 2 300MHz processor
    Windows 95/98/ME/2000
    64Mb ram
    650Mb hard drive space
    8xCd rom

    Age of Empires:
    Windows 95/98
    166Mhz Processor
    32MB Ram
    4X CD-ROM Drive
    200-300MB free HD space
    16-bit PCI/AGP Graphics Card
    16-bit Sound Blaster compatible Sound Card with Speakers
    256 Colour Monitor supporting high colour(16-bit) at 800x640 resolution

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