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FableVision Shines at Games for Change

Celebrating its 20th anniversary, the Games for Change (G4C) Festival in New York City brought together industry leaders, game developers, executives, and fans to share best practices from the best impact-making games and the creative minds behind them. 

As frequent festival presenters, attendees, and award nominees and winners, FableVisionaries are no strangers to G4C. FableVision has attended and been involved with the festival from its early years, as it perfectly aligns with the studio’s mission to move the world to a better place through positive media. We’ve proudly collaborated with G4C in the past and have been honored to showcase our work in its arena. In previous years, FableVision’s Caduceus: Staff of the Alchemist, created with Children’s Hospital Trust, was nominated for the Direct Impact award, while Quandary, created with Learning Games Network, won the 2013 Game of the Year award.

FableVision shone at two studio project briefs, featuring our games Nunaka and The Plastic Pipeline. Read on for a recap. If you have questions about these projects, please reach out! We’re happy to chat.


Nunaka!: Games for Indigenous Cultural Heritage Preservation
FableVision Presenter: Anne Richards, Producer, Game Designer, Co-Creative

Created with Chugachmiut, a non-profit that serves Native tribes in the Chugach region of Alaska, Nunaka is an early childhood mobile game that excites 3-5-year-olds about the Alaska Native Sugpiaq culture, teaches the Sugt'stun language, and targets key school readiness goals. The game recently won the Formal Learning (Elementary) award at the James Paul GEE! Learning Game Awards

Anne Richards, who produced the game, has deep expertise in developing children’s media for television, publishing, games, edtech, and more. Her experience and game design background contributed to creating a fun, engaging, and beautiful game. Anne’s presentation emphasized the importance of making communities like G4C more accessible to the Indigenous people who are inspiring conversations around representation in the edtech space – also how we can travel to meet knowledge holders where they are.

In the story-driven game, players take on the role of a Sugpiaq child living with their grandparents, Emaa and Apaa, in a fictionalized version of a community based on villages in the Chugach region. Players create an avatar and explore the village, completing activities and minigames, while collecting items and interacting with other residents, including human characters and animals from the region. 

To make the game as culturally accurate as possible, FableVision co-designed and co-developed Nunaka with Chugachmiut and the Sugpiaq people during virtual Elder meetings. Studio members also visited Alaska multiple times for meetings to get feedback in person from the Sugpiaq Elders and village Head Start students. 

Nunaka stands out from other cultural games by preserving an endangered language. “There were a lot of intricacies of working with Sugt’stun,” said Anne. “This language has been passed down via oral tradition rather than as a written language, and there is an extremely small number of master speakers remaining, many of whom have lost some of their knowledge of the language over time.”

To ensure that Nunaka captured Sugt’stun correctly, FableVision gathered groups of speakers to help each other with script translations and to collectively navigate dialectical differences, which could be significant even within a small geographic region. It was also important to investigate the cultural context behind translations to make sure details weren’t getting lost in the process. “One of our favorite examples: ‘Akutaq,’ which is translated as ‘Sugpiaq ice cream’ in English, is a dish of potatoes and seal oil. Very different from the ice cream we are used to,” said Anne.

Anne acknowledged the limitations of her ability to represent the Sugpiaq perspective on Nunaka’s creation process. “I’d like to challenge attendees and the larger G4C community to engage with ways in which these conversations can be more accessible to Indigenous people themselves,” she said. “It was not possible for our Alaska Native partners to travel a long distance for a brief conference presentation. I encourage the community to consider how to make our spaces more genuinely accessible to Indigenous and marginalized people.”

Play Nunaka today! The game can be downloaded on iOS and Google Play.


The Plastic Pipeline
FableVision Presenter: Jonah Gaynor, Producer

Considering that the world is producing double the amount of plastic waste as it did two years ago, the Wilson Center partnered with FableVision to create The Plastic Pipeline, an online game that educates and encourages policy change to combat leaks in the real-life “plastic pipeline.” 

FableVision producer Jonah Gaynor utilized his game design background to design Nurdle Alert!, a minigame that teaches players about nurdles and their impact on the environment. “Nurdles are the ‘lego bricks of the plastic world,’ the smallest unit of melted down plastic,” he said. “Staying consistent to the art and style of the game, the minigame centers around capturing these nurdles with a net before they damage the environment and creatures.” 

To engage young adults with the game, players act as influencers in Plasti City who have the power to create change by learning from characters in different locations who interact with the pipeline at every stage and represent different voices within the discussion of what to do about the plastics crisis. The game centers around policy decisions to show that the largest burden of responsibility for lessening plastic pollution falls on legislatures and policy makers, rather than individual consumer actions. 

Director of Wilson Center’s Serious Games Initiative Dr. Elizabeth M. H. Newbury and Director of Wilson Center’s China Environment Forum Dr. Jennifer Turner presented with Jonah to explain the game development process – policy research, iteration and design, and testing, and the next steps, which would involve more testing and further building out of the game. 

While Nurdle Alert! starts out fairly easy, the levels get exponentially challenging, mimicking the real difficulty of the clean-up process, and encouraging replayability. “The levels of the game demonstrate that the clean-up process doesn’t have a simple solution,” said Jonah. “While that is frustrating, players keep returning to the minigame hoping to improve their score. That also allows them to keep exploring the game, furthering its mission in educating players about the plastic pipeline.”

Check out the game and stay tuned for its further development.


In Summary – More Highlights & Takeaways

The G4C movement promotes using games for social change, and changemakers discussed how games can be more than great entertainment, but can also unite communities, improve players’ well-being, help players express themselves, foster creativity, provide education, and more. To spark change and make the most impact, speakers encouraged game developers to broaden the community by looking into emerging markets, making games available to a larger audience, and creating games with players’ interests in mind.

Among other topics, this year’s festival discussed how games can raise awareness about sustainability and social justice issues. Games like Endling: Extinction is Forever by Herobeat Studios (Game of the Year and Most Significant Impact) and Terra Nil by Free Lives (Most Impact) confronted environmental degradation and restoring nature. 

Meanwhile, Go Nisha Go: My Life My Choice by Howard Delafield International, LLP (Best Learning Game) and (val)iant: or, val’s guide to having a broken vag by Cactus Studio (Best Student Game) focused on sexual and reproductive health, empowering women to make informed decisions about their bodies. The festival’s winners from this year represented eight countries – check out the full list of winners and nominees

Grace Collins, a former FableVisionary and founder/CEO of Snowbright Studio, was recognized as the 2023 Vanguard recipient for their work in bringing the game industry to new places, such as the Smithsonian and U.S. Department of Education, as well as their advocacy for LGBTQ+ voices. We congratulate Grace on all of their amazing work! 

Thank you G4C for a great festival. Until next time!

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FableVision Resources for Social-Emotional Learning

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Resilience, empathy, and compassion—these are the social-emotional skills that empower kids to speak up for themselves and their friends during difficult situations. However, that’s easier said than done—developing social-emotional and critical thinking skills takes practice and courage. To help kids grow into brave adults, FableVision gathered a list of resources for you and your family to explore.


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Sesame Street in Community Spinners
To aid Sesame Street achieve its mission of helping children grow smarter, kinder, and stronger, FableVision created two spinner engine interactives in partnership with Sesame Workshop. They’ll be used in Sesame Street in Communities, an online resource to help parent and educate 0-5-year-olds. Grover’s Playground Workout helps children have fun while exercising. After spinning the wheel and landing on a monster, children and parents imitate the moves of that monster. Using muppets, A Little Help from My Furry Friends teaches coping strategies for stress and anxiety. 


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Project Here Games
To help the state of Massachusetts’ Project Here initiative of changing the status quo of substance use prevention education, FableVision partnered with the Massachusetts Attorney General’s Office, GE Foundation, and Health Resources in Action. The output of the partnership is Project Here Games. The game tackles coping methods, decision-making, communication, and myth-busting. As players travel through the games by applying their earned skills to solve life-like scenarios, they’re able to test their solutions in a safe space, while staying entertained.


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Galaxia
A missing professor, illegal substances, an online bully, and an evil plot that could put the entire school in jeopardy—these are the challenges students face in Galaxia, FableVision’s bullying prevention game. Created in partnership with National Health Promotion Associates (NHPA) for the LifeSkills Training middle school curriculum, Galaxia allows students to work through scenarios surrounding peer pressure, bullying, coping with stress, and more. The outerspace boarding school game helps students make smart choices in a fun way, and the choices in the game affect the trajectory of their path.


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Different Kinds of Hurt: Isaac’s Story
In collaboration with the Massachusetts Department of Mental Health and Walker Cares, FableVision created Different Kinds of Hurt: Isaac’s Story, a multi-media campaign consisting of a graphic novel (available for free to Massachusetts residents), animated film, and accompanying print resources. Featuring young Isaac and his friend Mia as they discuss their recent time in the hospital, the resources aim to normalize conversations about mental health and fight the stigma surrounding mental health issues.


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Civics! An American Musical
As children navigate U.S. history and analyze primary resources to produce their own musical, Civics! An American Musical teaches middle school students the power of everyday citizens in causing change. Developed in partnership with Maryland Public Television, Maryland Humanities, and Tufts’ CIRCLE as a part of the Library of Congress’ Teaching With Primary Sources Program, it aims to motivate the next generation of activists. The Hamilton-inspired games allow students to adapt true events from U.S. history to the stage, such as the desegregation of public schools, the National Parks, the FDA, and the Chinese Exclusion Act.


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Quandary
Can a game include complicated ethical problems while engaging children on a narrative level? In collaboration with the Learning Games Network, FableVision answered yes to this question by creating Quandary, an ethical decision-making card game. Students play as the captain of the new space colony Braxos and use their listening and moral decision-making skills to keep the peace among colonies. The game aims to help players make difficult decisions where there are no right or wrong answers, like most conflicts in everyday life.


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Say Something!
Written by FableVision founder and New York Times bestselling author Peter H. Reynolds and published by Scholastic, Say Something! reminds children that their voices can inspire, heal, and transform. To provide movement to the message and art of the book, FableVision created a trailer and animated film that encourage children to be brave and speak up against injustice. Using the uplifting words and actions of the characters as inspiration, the trailer and film follow them striving to make a positive difference in their world.


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"Zoombinis" Now On FableVision Games!

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The little blue guys on a logical adventure have found a new home!

The award-winning relaunch of the classic, beloved ’90s game Logical Journey of the Zoombinis is now available for classroom use on FableVision Games. Created in partnership with TERC, a not-for-profit leader in K-12 math and science education, and the Learning Games Network, a not-for-profit game company, Zoombinis is an engaging and entertaining logic puzzle game designed to teach Computational Thinking (CT) for grades 3-8. 

Players must use their logical reasoning, data analysis, pattern finding, and problem-solving skills to help their Zoombini characters complete unique challenges, escape imprisonment from the evil Bloats, and reach the promised land of Zoombiniville. On this journey, they face 12 puzzles and four levels of increasing difficulty in each, including Pizza Pass, Titanic Tattooed Toads, and Mudball Wall. The Zoombinis travel in groups across multiple levels until all 400 blue creatures are saved.

Zoombinis uses implicit learning—learning that can’t be necessarily articulated on a test or in a question, but that manifests itself as behaviors or practices within a game. Throughout gameplay, players learn important life skills including algebraic thinking, data analysis, and theory formulation in a fun and engaging setting. 

The classroom version features additional educator materials and guides, as well as tracking that allows educators to collect data as their students play Zoombinis, and—through the use of detectors—identify when players demonstrate the four fundamental practices of CT: problem decomposition, pattern recognition, algorithm design, and abstraction as they appear within the puzzles.

The web game is now available to play on FableVision Games, where you can also access accompanying professional development resources.

FableVision Games is a curated games platform that provides research-based game-based learning resources and supports. Sign up for our newsletter so you don’t miss out on the latest announcements, promotions, and new game launches.

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You're Invited to FableVision's Virtual Summer Picnic

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FableVision is waving hello to summer! Though summer break may look different to many students this year, FableVision has put together a list of resources and activities for your kids to enjoy and keep their minds sharp.

As more camps, schools, and families continue to be affected by the global pandemic, our studio is proud to provide resources for both you and your child in order to provide fun, exciting and new ways to take this summer to the next level! Whether you’re looking for some fun coloring pages, challenging and engaging educational games, or craft and activity-filled new shows and films to watch, we gathered our favorites to spice up this summer for you and your family. 


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Summer Banner

Soak in the summer fun with our new summer banner, designed by FableVision director of art and animation Bob Flynn. Celebrating the first day of summer and all the wild adventures with friends the season can bring, this banner is now also available as a printable coloring book page. Release your inner artist, and be sure to share your artwork and tag FableVision through our Twitter, Facebook, and Instagram channels for a chance to be featured on our social media pages! 

Click on the black and white image to your left to download and print your own FableVision summer 2020 banner coloring page.


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Cyberchase Fractions Quest 

Brain power to the rescue! FableVision is proud to present Cyberchase Fractions Quest, our newest game that integrates a story-based setting with a research-based approach to fractions learning! Combining research-supported teaching methods with an engaging narrative context to motivate students, players embark on a quest to save Cyberspace from the villain Hacker and his henchbots Delete and Buzz. Stepping into the role of the hero, players travel through a series of minigames to deepen their understanding of fractions and tap, jump, and solve their way to success!

Aligned with Common Core Standards for Grade 3 and 4 mathematical structure, this game grounds students' conceptual understanding of fractions and practice math while on summer break!

The public beta version is available for free for a limited time on FableVision Games.


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The Paper Girls Show

Are you ready to let your imagination run wild? In partnership with Global Tinker, FableVision created a new STEAM-powered animated series that encourages girls to find innovative solutions to everyday problems. Follow best friends and makers Caily and Reese as they discover the fantastical paper world of Confetti and find inspiration to solve their real world dilemmas. 

Each episode provides corresponding activities and curriculum that introduce viewers to a different type of accessible technology. From paper circuitry to 3D printing, viewers are able to learn about the world around them through relatable characters, creative storytelling, and magical art and design as they explore Confetti.

Empowering young girls to create, play, and imagine, this STEAM-based series allows for children to experience science, art, engineering, and programming in a whole new way that shows them: “If you can dream it, you can make it!”

Season one is available to stream now on YouTube.


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Quandary

Planet Brazos needs your help! Playing as the captain of a new space colony, players must help their settlers solve ethical dilemmas by considering each viewpoint and making the best decision for the community as a whole. A Learning Games Network and FableVision-created game for the classroom and at home, Quandary develops and trains students’ critical thinking and problem solving skills and uses character development and story to help  players understand the difference between fact and opinions, and apply the skills they gain to real world problems.

A multi-award winning ethics learning game, Quandary is available for free on the Quandary website.


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Go Wild! With Ranger Rick

Learn more about your favorite animals in Go Wild! With Ranger Rick, a FableVision-created app for the National Wildlife Federation (NWF)’s Ranger Rick magazine series. Engaging kids ages 4-9, this app features three activities: Mystery Animal, That’s Wild!, and Rick’s Pix. In Mystery Animal, players are given a range of clues and prompted to guess the animal they think it is! In That’s Wild!, children read and laugh along to riddles, jokes, and fun facts based on all of their favorite animals. In Rick’s Pix, children and parents can either take or select a photo and create a whole new image to save and share using stickers, nature backgrounds, and fun frames. Designed to immerse young players in the natural world, this app leverages real wildlife information provided by the NWF.

The app is free to download with a Ranger Rick magazine subscription, providing young children a whole new digital experience of nature!


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Good Thinking! The Science of Teaching Science 

Debunk myths in your classroom with the Good Thinking! The Science of Teaching Science animated series. Created by FableVision for the Smithsonian Science Education Center, the series provides teachers with opportunities to learn how to best adhere to next generation science standards, perfect for summer professional development! Each episode offers insightful pedagogical ideas that educators can explore across a large range of subject-matter. From topics like natural selection to energy and gravity, Good Thinking! is a useful tool for teachers to learn how to best deliver heavy content in an approachable fashion.

With a new lesson and demonstration on how to engage with students every episode, this series is research-proven and vetted by experts, helping to deepen understanding of STEM topics for both teachers and students.

Good Thinking! is housed on the Smithsonian website, YouTube channel, and on PBS Learning Media.


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The Word Collector

Discover the magic of words that can connect, transform, and empower! Written and illustrated by FableVision founder and award-winning children’s book author and illustrator Peter H. Reynolds, The Word Collector is an empowering book centered on celebrating the power of words. Published by Scholastic and named as a 2019 Outstanding Literary Work for Children by the NAACP, this book marks the importance and journey of finding your own unique voice in the world.

FableVision also created an accompanying animated film of The Word Collector to bring the story of a young boy who collects words that inspire and move him and the people around him to action to life.

Visit wordcollector.org to learn more about the book and purchase your own copy! And to stream and listen to Michelle and President Barack Obama read the story aloud for the Chicago Public Library’s “Live from the Library” storytime sessions, check out the Obama Foundation’s YouTube channel. To watch the animated film, visit the Scholastic website.

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April FableFriday: Peter Stidwill, Executive Producer

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“When there’s a lot going on, it’s a bit like conducting an orchestra,” shares Peter Stidwill, FableVision Studios’ executive producer. A working studio has many moving parts—departments, research cycles, partners—and Peter works with all of them to ensure harmonious production. 

Peter originally connected with FableVision during his time at Learning Games Network (LGN), a longtime FableVision partner, with whom the studio collaborated on the award-winning Quandary. His background includes jobs at the BBC and the UK Houses of Parliament, where he worked on game-based learning and digital educational tools.

In his role, Peter manages multiple animation, games, museum interactives, and other media, as well as oversees staffing to ensure that teams are set up to meet the varied needs of all projects and clients. From finding potential new partners to creating initial timelines to reviewing user feedback, Peter guides projects from inception to completion. “As a producer, I absolutely love being the ‘vision holder’ of a project,” shares Peter. This “vision” allows him to oversee every aspect of a project as the ultimate production maestro. You can catch him representing the studio at various panels at industry conferences—including an upcoming one in June! Read on for more details. 

What does a day in your life as executive producer look like, and how has your daily task list changed since first joining FableVision?
Although my transition to executive producer meant taking a step back from some of the detailed day-to-day production tasks, it allowed me to play a bigger role in finding and meeting clients and partners—brilliant people doing engaging and impactful work—and collaborating with them to shape the overall approach of new projects. A typical day for me includes talking to potential clients to scope out new partnership opportunities, mentoring and supporting our talented team of producers, working with FableVision’s skilled art, technical, and creative directors to plan resources, and meeting with individual production teams to kick-off new projects and review deliverables. And snacks. Lots of snacks. (Is it snack time yet?)

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What sets FableVision apart from other studios?
It’s all about the amazing diversity of people and projects. My FableVision colleagues bring enthusiasm, joy, and thoughtfulness to all our projects. And our clients and partners allow us to create some of the most worthwhile and important products, campaigns, and media that I could hope to work on, whether that’s bringing age-appropriate playful assessment to kids across the State of Georgia, or helping children and parents destigmatize conversations around mental health through an animation and graphic novel right here in Massachusetts.

What is challenging in your role? What is rewarding?
Each of our projects is unique at FableVision, and that’s what keeps them both challenging and rewarding! We have strong, solid processes for all the different types of media we create. At the same time, we constantly refine and customize our tools, approaches, and skills in order to meet specific goals, leverage new technology, and react to user feedback. It’s truly inspiring to see our production teams create so much fun content every day across such a broad range of projects, whether it’s a digital prototype to test a game mechanic, a cute raccoon character for an animation, or music for our latest app.

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You’ve worked on large projects like Zoombinis and Quandary! How do you approach projects of that scale, and what’s your favorite part about working on those kinds of projects?
The idea for a Zoombinis relaunch began while I was still working at Learning Games Network prior to joining FableVision, so I was excited to be a part of the team making the game a reality after coming to FableVision. One of my earliest roles was to write the game design document, which required me to have a strong understanding of the original game in order to reverse engineer the game logic. We also made alterations to the logic according to feedback we received from fans of the original and the original game designers: Scot Osterweil and Chris Hancock. The project truly was a team effort between TERC, FableVision, and LGN, and that strong partnership—as well as always honoring the original vision of the game while also modernizing it to maximize its impact of end-users, both those who have been fans for years and first-time players—was truly what made it a success.

Quandary was my first project at LGN, and being able to see the process from both the client and developer sides was very interesting for me. With a game like Quandary, which teaches ethics and perspective-taking through story and a card-sorting mechanism, it’s important to keep the game goal top of mind, along with considering scale, timeline, and other budget needs. In approaching a game like Quandary, the learning objectives and the impact of the game on the user are important to consider throughout the game design process. We’ve received incredibly positive feedback from educators and students, as well as the educational gaming industry through conference awards and talks, which really show the impact that a game can have on teaching social-emotional skills, such as problem-solving and comprehension.

In my role as executive producer, one of the most fun parts of a large-scale project is to map out the overall approach, beginning with an empty slate and blank timeline, and sketching out the components of the project, as well as balancing everything out to meet the needs, timeline, and budget. It often involves a lot of number wrangling in spreadsheets and planning software, but I find it to be a rewardingly creative and collaborative process in its own right.

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You have a background in engineering, with a focus on “virtual learning applications.” How has your background influenced your work at FableVision?
I always knew I wanted to combine art and technology in a way that helped inform and entertain. I also knew that I loved creating—be that films, games, or elaborate models of theme park rides. So educational media and technology was a perfect fit. That’s what I specialized in during my engineering degree, where I focussed on researching, creating, testing, and iterating on technology approaches that made a real impact for teachers and students. I’ve always tried to build on that experience and approach throughout my career.

You came to FableVision from Learning Games Network, who we’ve had a strong partnership with for years. What was it like working with FableVision as a client? How was the transition into FableVision’s production process?
I absolutely LOVED working with FableVision as a client. FableVision genuinely took the time and effort to understand and build on the goals of the projects I worked with them on. I think that’s part of FableVision’s secret sauce: each team member that touches a project during its development is empowered, encouraged, and motivated to add creativity to the finished product. It was a natural transition from LGN to FableVision, as I knew the people and mission was aligned with my own.

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You’re presenting in a Serious Play Conference panel in June on game-based assessments with MIT Education Arcade and Playful Journey Lab. How are game-based assessments gaining momentum in the edtech industry, and how has FableVision stayed at the forefront of this trend?
Game-based assessments are becoming more popular as an alternative to traditional testing that often takes the stress out of the assessment process. We’ve found that game-based assessments show a lot of promise in their ability to level within grade levels for students struggling with mastery of the standard. There are multiple entry points along the learning continuum to assess the standards in a game.

In designing game-based assessments, FableVision tries to approach them in a similar manner to our non-assessment projects, marrying content and game design. Good games—whether educational or not—inherently assess the player’s ability to perform in the game and provide appropriate leveling, feedback, rewards, and challenges in real-time. That’s what makes games such a great learning tool. And as they are digital, there is huge potential, but also potential pitfalls, with capturing that data and presenting it back to players and teachers. So when designing game-based assessments, we try to bring in our extensive knowledge of game design and user engagement, while adding on the additional assessment layer. 

Formative assessment, in particular, we find is where the benefit of a gaming approach can really shine through and where teachers can get insights into how the kids are doing and provide targeted interventions to help them. We design the backends of our assessment games so they collect data throughout and present that information to educators. The data that we deliver to teachers is always at the forefront of our minds. We are fortunate to have worked and continue to work with incredible partners and clients, in both the commercial and academic worlds, to apply the best practices from researchers, the feedback and insights from educators, and the experiences of players in this field over diverse subject areas and for all ages across a large number of games.

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You’re also an avid gamer—both playing and creating! What is your favorite game at the moment, and what overlaps do you see between the work you do at FableVision, the games you play for entertainment, and the projects you complete in your spare time?
I’m currently playing A Short Hike, a delightful and relaxing exploration game that builds a wonderful sense of place and adventure. Like many of the games I play and that FableVision makes, it fuses story, characters, and mechanics to create a fun, uplifting, and moving experience.

April showers bring May flowers! What’s your favorite rainy day activity, and how do you keep yourself entertained while stuck indoors?
Rainy days are always a great excuse to play both computer and board games. I’ve also recently got back into an old hobby of mine: video editing. While I love making non-linear experiences, I also find a lot of joy in the creativity of compiling linear stories.

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More About Peter:

Next on your to-read list: Hag-Seed by Margaret Atwood.

Favorite hiking trail: Franconia Ridge Loop Trail, White Mountains, NH—conquered on my second attempt!

Best ride at your favorite theme park: Avatar: Flight of Passage, Disney’s Animal Kingdom.

Public figure you’d most like to meet (dead or alive!): Kylie Minogue.

Favorite word: Omnishambles.

Preferred way to have a cup of tea: PG Tips with milk! (Good old English builder’s tea).

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