Showing posts with label AI. Show all posts
Showing posts with label AI. Show all posts

Tuesday, June 17, 2025

AI Supports Esports in Education

As an avid tech nerd, gaming enthusiast, and digital native, I have always been one to test new technologies, push the boundaries, and make sure students can see the uses of technology in their everyday lives. I used ChatGPT when it was first showcased, and had it create a list of reasons why scholastic esports were important to use in school. Gaming, computer science, and AI all blend nicely together in the world of education. Then, a few years later, I found that same prompt and prompted ChatGPT to update my prior request. It gave me two different options this time, and in much more of my own voice. Below are the two different prompts. Let me know in my social media polls which one works best!

Image of the Author as an action figure, holding steam deck with additional esports tools, titled Esports Educator. Made with Chat GPT's image creation tools. a

Response 1: 

Why Esports Belongs in High Schools: An Instructional and Engagement Powerhouse

After nearly two decades in education—spanning classroom teaching, instructional leadership, and higher education support—I’ve seen firsthand the transformative power of student engagement. One of the most impactful and often overlooked tools to reach today’s learners is esports. Whether students are competing at a high level or casually connecting in a club environment, esports offers high schools a dynamic platform for instruction, inclusion, and innovation.

A New Pathway for Engagement

Not every student connects with traditional extracurriculars. Esports offers a new, highly relevant option—one that speaks their language. As someone who’s built both a computer science pathway and a scholastic esports program from the ground up, I’ve seen students who struggled to find their place suddenly light up when handed a controller or asked to lead a strategy session.

Esports clubs provide an entry point that feels familiar and exciting. Students engage not only in gaming but also in teamwork, leadership, and communication. I’ve coached students who started off shy or academically disengaged and watched them grow into confident leaders, shoutcasters, analysts, and even aspiring coders.

Inclusive by Design

Unlike traditional sports, esports is inherently inclusive. It doesn’t discriminate by physical ability, gender identity, or socioeconomic background. I’ve seen students who might otherwise be sidelined become integral members of a thriving community. In our club spaces, students with IEPs, English language learners, and those from diverse backgrounds came together over shared goals and mutual respect.

Casual players are just as important as competitive ones. Whether they're helping moderate a Discord server, creating team logos, managing social media, or simply enjoying the community, there’s a role for every student.

Real-World Skills in Action

In my time as a NASEF Fellow, Mentor, and now Community Leader, I’ve helped other educators tap into the full educational potential of esports. When structured intentionally, these programs teach far more than gameplay. Students learn:

  • Communication and Collaboration – Every match is a team effort. Students learn to give and receive feedback, resolve conflicts, and adapt strategies in real time.

  • Digital Literacy and Tech Fluency – From streaming and shoutcasting to hardware troubleshooting and software configuration, esports cultivates essential 21st-century skills.

  • Critical Thinking and Decision-Making – Strategy, adaptability, and analysis are core to gameplay—and all transferable to STEM fields and beyond.

And let’s be clear: esports isn’t “just gaming.” It’s broadcasting. It’s event planning. It’s graphic design. It’s business. It’s coding. In my time as Director of Secondary Services at Harrisburg University, I worked to align dual enrollment and workforce development programs with the kinds of real-world skills esports fosters. The career connections are already there—we just need to build the bridges.

A Culture of Belonging and Well-being

There’s also a social-emotional side to this work. Esports clubs give students a safe, welcoming space to be themselves. They form friendships, build community, and find a sense of purpose. During some of the most isolating moments of the pandemic, our esports program became a lifeline—students kept showing up not just for the games, but for each other.

Looking Forward

High schools should embrace esports not as an afterthought, but as a cornerstone of modern student engagement. When structured thoughtfully, these programs blend learning, community, and fun in ways that are hard to replicate elsewhere.

Whether you’re running a varsity program or just starting a casual club, esports is more than just an extracurricular—it's a future-ready, student-centered instructional tool. And it works.

Friday, June 21, 2024

What Teaching Needs Now!

When I proudly declared I wanted to go into education, after my senior year of high school, I thought I was doing it for all of the right reasons. I wanted to give back to society, and the impact that education had on me growing up, the goal was to educate the youth and help them find their path. Then after 14.5 years in the classroom, I transitioned into higher education and an administrative role. My impact on education has grown tenfold what I had as a classroom teacher, and I always want to support the efforts of those in the classroom. The Secondary Schools Team at Harrisburg University of Science and Technology is a dynamic group of exemplary professionals who are continually supporting high school teachers and students in the very thing I wanted to do as a teacher, help students develop a path.

Teachers need to pivot, in an age where information is readily available at your fingertips, and people can find massive amounts of information at any given time. We need fewer standardized tests for rote memorization, we need more time to collaborate and build engaging authentic lessons with our peers, and we also need time to reach students where they are. ChatGPT has shown that AI can help us use algorithms to find and write in detail. AI can be used to spark creativity and learning how to navigate new platforms is especially important for all learners. The moral implications should also be explained, in that the individual's creative rights are important, and so too is the advancement of knowledge use.

Made with AI Comic Factory

Gone are the days of needing to know absolutely everything by memory. Now we need confidence in finding the correct processes. So, to fix say an outlet you should be able to find DIY information, with skilled professionals who are not going to cut corners, but make you able to fix something simple up to the correct code. AR glasses can be used by technicians to facilitate fixing machines and wiring within a manufacturing plant. (See Vuzix: Field Service Glasses)

A Man Playing a Video Game using Game Controllers
Photo by Pavel Danilyuk from Pexels: Link Here

Education needs to adapt and become the problem-solving, critical-thinking, confidence-building vehicle behind all modern industry changes. Multiple-choice, standardized tests, are a thing of the past. Absorbing and analyzing information in a digestible format makes learning so much easier. During a webinar I attended in 2017, a presenter stated that human beings are visual learners. Hence, learning from videos or images broken down into steps helps us learn more quickly. Reading and interpreting a text is a learned behavior, and although some are successful that way, not all learners can learn processes through reading alone. Another book I just read, Make it Stick: The Science of Successful Learning, gave multiple case studies on how learners who had multiple points to recall information in short assessments or self-questioning, learned material better. Teachers need to practice new quick learning and recall skills with students and get rid of re-reading until they understand practices. Practical use of knowledge is how recall becomes long-term and useful. 

One tool that resonates with me personally is the use of scholastic esports. Gaming to learn, gamification, game design, competitive gaming matches, and setting up intermural and external esports tournaments are all great pathways where games can be used to leverage learning. Students can think critically, use problem-solving skills, collaborate, and build leadership skills all in scholastic esports programs. Students don't have to be great gamers either to get into the space, there are support roles that are highly needed, and when developed can be used in a multitude of careers in the future, including social media and marketing. Education needs to embrace gaming and tools like it for teaching students. Scholastic uses of games can help connect to students who might have a harder time connecting with their learning. 

Gaming Setup For Competitive Esports
Photo by Yan Krukau from Pexels: Link Here