Video games can turn university graduates into better employees | Matthew Barr
Video games improve communication, adaptibility and critical thinking - just the attributes that employers are looking for
In recent years, Boris Johnson has excelled at making ignorant pronouncements and illiterate blunders. From offensive remarks on burqas to reciting Kipling in Myanmar and his ludicrous statements on Brexit, Johnson has perfected the art of getting it wrong. It feels like he's managed to offend just about everyone. For video game educators like myself, that moment arrived way back in 2006, when Johnson attacked video games as a learning tool.
"They [young people] become like blinking lizards, motionless, absorbed, only the twitching of their hands showing they are still conscious," he wrote. "These machines teach them nothing. They stimulate no ratiocination, discovery or feat of memory - though some of them may cunningly pretend to be educational."
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