Slashdot Mirror


Microsoft Weaponizes Minecraft In the War Over Classrooms (backchannel.com)

Minecraft: Education Edition offers lesson plans like "City Planning for Population Growth" and "Effects of Deforestation," and a June preview attracted more than 25,000 students and teachers from 40 different countries. Slashdot reader mirandakatz writes: In the two years since Microsoft acquired Minecraft's parent company, it's discovered a brilliant new direction to take the game: it's turning it into a tool for education, creating both an innovative approach to classroom technology and an inspired strategy for competing with Google and Apple in the ed-tech market. 'I actually never believed there would be a game that would really cross over between the commercial entertainment market and education in a mainstream way,' says cultural anthropologist Mimi Ito—but Minecraft has managed to do just that.
In 2015 Chromebooks represented over 50% of PC sales for U.S. schools, while Windows PC accounted for just 22%, the article reports. But Minecraft is the second best-selling game of all time, behind only Tetris, and in the two years since Microsoft acquired it, "Sales have doubled to almost 107 million copies sold... If you were to count each copy sold as representing one person, the resulting population would be the world's 12th largest country (after Japan)." And as the article points out, "wherever Minecraft goes, Microsoft is there."

2 of 55 comments (clear)

  1. Wut by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Interesting

    How the fuck does Minecraft constitute ed-tech?
    Is anything ed-tech these days? Watching wall paint dry teaches me chemistry and thermodynamics about as much as Mincraft teaches me math, physics, programming, and chemistry.

    1. Re:Wut by 0100010001010011 · · Score: 3, Interesting

      You can build an 8-bit computer in minecraft. Red stone is basic logic gates. People have built fully automated tools and processes using very basic resources.

      I'd hire a top Minecraft builder to build my Simulink models over most Engineers I've seen that use it.

      I'm interested in what paint drying you're watching that teaches you that much about chemistry and thermo.