Feb 3, 2011 When I was invited to attend the “Power of Active Play” summit hosted by the American Heart Association and Nintendo, my synapses were firing in Howard Rheingold mode, wondering if this convening was going to be a glorified commercial for the gamification of life. I may not be wearing the same rose-colored shades of Jane McGonigal’s Wall Street Journal article … [Read more...]
AHA & Nintendo: Tag-Teaming Innovation To Get Kids Moving (Pt2)
Filed Under: Consumerism, Emerging trends & STEM, Interactive Games, Marketing Shaping Youth, Media Literacy, Mobile Media, Apps & Gaming, Nutrition & Wellness, Positive Picks, Pro-Social & Positive Picks, Product Placement, Sexualization & Body Image, Shaping Youth, Stereotypes & Diversity Tagged With: academic benefits of play, AHA, American Heart Association, Amy-Jussel, CES11, children, digital-culture-play, exergaming, exertion games, gaming, Get active, Health 2.0, Health Gamers, healthy games, Hope Lab, Humana Games, Humana Games for Health, IFTF, Innovations in getting active, Jane McGonigal, Kids at play, Kids health, kinetics, Let's Move, motion control systems, National Institute of Play, Nintendo Wii, obesity, physical fitness kids, play, play outdoors, Play promotes creativity, Play Works, PlayWorks, Power of Active Play Summit, power of play, Recess Counts, RWJF, scientific benefits of play, Second that e-motion, Verb Yellowball, wellness, Why play matters, Wii Are Family, Wii Fit
Power of Play Series: (Pt 1) Play Works!
Jan. 29, 2011 No doubt about it, I need more PLAY in my life. You? I'm rereading Dr. Stuart Brown's Play: How it Shapes the Brain, Opens the Imagination & Invigorates the Soul and following the "Recess Counts" Twitter stream w/newsy tidbits like ChicagoTrib's "How Cold is Too Cold for Recess?" noting the logical bridges between outdoor fun and indoor exergaming that fit … [Read more...]
Filed Under: EcoKids-Environment, Emerging trends & STEM, Interactive Games, Marketing Shaping Youth, Media Literacy, Nutrition & Wellness, Positive Picks, Pro-Social & Positive Picks, Sexualization & Body Image, Shaping Youth Tagged With: academics and play, AHA, American Heart Association, Amy-Jussel, children, digital-culture-play, exergaming, Get active, Innovations in getting active, Institute of Play, Kids at play, Kids health, kinetics, Let's Move, National Institute of Play, Nintendo Wii, physical fitness kids, play, play outdoors, Play promotes creativity, Play Works, PlayWorks, Power of Active Play Summit, power of play, Recess Counts, sensory, sledding, tactile play, Why play matters, Wii Fit