Back
other Feb 22, 2024

The Utility of Gamification in Learning

Gamification, integrating game-like elements into learning environments, proves effective in increasing student learning, engagement, and enjoyment.

by Justin Skycak (@justinskycak) justinmath.com 775 words
View original

Gamification, integrating game-like elements into learning environments, proves effective in increasing student learning, engagement, and enjoyment.

This post is part of the book The Math Academy Way (Working Draft, Jan 2024). Suggested citation: Skycak, J., advised by Roberts, J. (2024). The Utility of Gamification in Learning. In The Math Academy Way (Working Draft, Jan 2024). https://justinmath.com/the-utility-of-gamification-in-learning/

Want to get notified about new posts? Join the mailing list and follow on X/Twitter.


A common theme across many of the cognitive learning strategies described in this document has been that they produce more learning by increasing cognitive activation, which students find less enjoyable because it’s more mentally taxing. Furthering the inconvenience, students often mistakenly interpret extra cognitive effort as an indication that they are not learning as well, when in fact the opposite is true.

Thankfully, the strategy of gamification behaves differently. Numerous studies have shown that when game-like elements (such as points and leaderboards) are integrated into student learning environments in ways that are

  1. aligned with the goals of a course, the motivations of the students, and the context of the educational setting, and
  2. robust to “hacking” or “gaming the system” (i.e. behaviors that attempt to bypass learning by exploiting loopholes in the rules of the game),

students typically not only learn more and engage more with the content, but also enjoy it more (Bai, Hew, & Huang, 2020; Looyestyn et al., 2017; Lei et al., 2022).

This applies not only to young students, but also to university-level students and even postgraduate students in technically-challenging courses. As the authors of a gamification study at Delft University of Technology describe (Iosup & Epema, 2014):

Clearly, gamification is a potent strategy for maintaining student motivation and helping students feel good about hard work. (Any readers with experience in high-performance athletics will know the wonders that a bit of gamification can do for maintaining morale while working hard at practice – usually in the form of tracking personal progress or engaging in friendly competition with teammates.)

Furthermore, gamification also functions as a lever by which to incentivize high-quality work. This is especially vital in adaptive learning systems, which speed up or slow down based on student performance, meaning that a student’s learning efficiency depends highly on the quality of their work:

In effect, for a student to make educational progress in an adaptive learning system, they have to put forth a sufficient amount of high-quality work.

References

Bai, S., Hew, K. F., & Huang, B. (2020). Does gamification improve student learning outcome? Evidence from a meta-analysis and synthesis of qualitative data in educational contexts. Educational Research Review, 30, 100322.

Iosup, A., & Epema, D. (2014). An experience report on using gamification in technical higher education. In Proceedings of the 45th ACM technical symposium on Computer science education (pp. 27-32).

Lei, H., Wang, C., Chiu, M. M., & Chen, S. (2022). Do educational games affect students’ achievement emotions? Evidence from a meta‐analysis. Journal of Computer Assisted Learning, 38 (4), 946-959.

Looyestyn, J., Kernot, J., Boshoff, K., Ryan, J., Edney, S., & Maher, C. (2017). Does gamification increase engagement with online programs? A systematic review. PloS one, 12 (3), e0173403.


This post is part of the book The Math Academy Way (Working Draft, Jan 2024). Suggested citation: Skycak, J., advised by Roberts, J. (2024). The Utility of Gamification in Learning. In The Math Academy Way (Working Draft, Jan 2024). https://justinmath.com/the-utility-of-gamification-in-learning/

Want to get notified about new posts? Join the mailing list and follow on X/Twitter.