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Quest to Learn

Coordinates:40°44′36″N74°00′10″W/ 40.74333°N 74.00278°W/40.74333; -74.00278
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Quest to Learn
Address
Map
351 West 18th Street

10011

United States
Coordinates40°44′36″N74°00′10″W/ 40.74333°N 74.00278°W/40.74333; -74.00278
Information
School typePublicsecondary
Established2009
School districtNew York City Department of Education
School numberM422
CEEB code333894[1]
PrincipalMarina Galazidis
Grades6-12
Enrollment591
Color(s)Orange and blue
MascotTitan
NicknameQuest or Q2L
Team nameTitans
Websitewww.q2l.org

Quest to Learn(Q2L) is a public middle and high school inNew York City.[2]The school is operated by theNew York City Department of Educationand is located in theBayard Rustin Educational Complexin theChelseaneighborhood ofManhattan.

History

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The creation of the school was a collaboration between theInstitute of Playand theNew York City Department of Education,with backing from theMacArthur Foundationand support from New Visions for Public Schools.[3]The school began in the 2009–2010 school year with one sixth grade class, and added a new grade every year until 2015 when it became a fully functioning combined middle and high school encompassing grades 6-12. Game designer and educatorKatie Salenwas one of the chief designers of the school.[4]

Curriculum

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Q2L's standards-based curriculum is developed collaboratively by teachers, game designers, and curriculum designers. Curriculum design mimics the design principles of games by framing every piece of the curriculum as a mission that involves game strategies such as collaboration, role-playing, and simulation. The school encourages hands-on problem solving,[5]and is designed to promote learning of skills many experts say are necessary for college and career success, such assystems thinking,collaboration, and digital literacy. Not only do students play games in the classrooms, they learn to make them in order to demonstrate their systems thinking skills.[4][6]

Quest to Learn emphasizes "7 Principles of Game-Based Learning":[7]

  • "Everyone is a participant",
  • "Challenge is constant",
  • "Learning happens by doing",
  • "Feedback is immediate and ongoing",
  • "Failure is reframed as “iteration”,
  • "Everything is interconnected", and
  • "It kind of feels like play".

Students

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Quest To Learn looks to engage their students through a unique learning style which incorporates games, hands-on activities, and collaborative activities. The student body is very diverse, with students having numerous cultural and ethnic backgrounds.

According to Brian Waniewski, the Managing Director of the Institute of Play in 2012, Quest to Learn's students "are performing at or above New York City-wide averages on standardized tests. In the first 20 months of the school’s operation, students showed statistically significant gains in systems thinking skills, according to a study fromFlorida State University.[8]

Notable Alumni

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  • Declan D'Aleo

References

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  1. ^"High School Directory".RetrievedJuly 27,2014.
  2. ^"Quest to Learn".www.schools.nyc.gov.Retrieved2019-06-12.
  3. ^Sutter, John D."Gaming Reality".CNN.RetrievedJune 12,2019.
  4. ^abDavidson,, Cathy (February 16, 2009)."Game School Opens in New York: Quest to Learn".HASTAC (Humanities, Arts, Science, and technology Advanced Collaboratory).RetrievedJune 12,2019.{{cite web}}:CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  5. ^Mooney, Allison."The Job's A Game"Google Think Quarterly
  6. ^Corbett, Sara (September 15, 2010)"Learning by Playing"The New York Times Magazine
  7. ^"About"Quest to Learn website
  8. ^Waniewski, Brian (December 18, 2012)"Meet The Game Designers Who Are On A Quest To Make NYC Public School More Fun"Fast Company
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