A Different Way of Learning
By Jahnelle Ofori-Nkansah
Being a student has always been a love-hate relationship for me. I have always loved the social side of school, but dragging myself to class was a different story. Some teachers, though, have a way of making learning exciting; they put their own creative spin on it. One of those teachers is Dr. Clara Voorhees, a biology professor here at D鈥橸ouville University, who makes her classes come alive through something unexpected...handmade board games!
Dr. Voorhees鈥 idea started back in graduate school when she had to run review sessions as a teaching assistant. She realized the best way to help students review material was to make it fun. 鈥淚 started looking at games I had around my house 鈥nes I grew up playing and then I鈥檇 modify them for whatever topic we were studying,鈥 she said. Games like Jeopardy or Parcheesi became study tools for anatomy and physiology terms. When she started teaching at D鈥橸ouville, she took that idea with her and expanded it into a whole collection of classroom games.
Producing new game ideas is not easy, though. Voorhees explained that she usually starts by looking at the topic she is teaching that week. From there, she brainstorms what type of game would fit best, a card game, a dice game, or even a full board game. Class size also matters; smaller groups can handle more detailed games, while bigger classes might need something simpler and faster to play.
Once she has an idea, the creative process begins. Voorhees orders blank board game kits from Amazon, then designs the game from scratch. She creates learning objectives and assessments, making sure the game actually teaches what she wants students to learn. 鈥淚 ask myself if the game makes sense for the topic and if it鈥檚 helping them meet the goal,鈥 she said.
Students usually love game days. 鈥淭hey get super competitive, which I love,鈥 Voorhees laughed. 鈥淓ven the shy students become the most competitive ones.鈥 The games do not happen every week, usually just a couple of times a semester, but in her Biodiversity II class, she dedicates an entire week to gaming. Each day, students play a different version of the same game, with new levels of complexity added as the week goes on.
Voorhees also has her students design their own games for class projects. She guides them through brainstorming, testing their games, and getting feedback from their peers. One of her favorites, Invasional Meltdown, teaches students about invasive species using dominoes. 鈥淪tudents try to build the longest chain of invasive species entering environments, and at the end, they knock them all down,鈥 she explained.
When asked what board games bring to learning that lectures do not, Voorhees said it all comes down to engagement. 鈥淚f you link what you鈥檙e learning to a fun experience, it鈥檚 easier to remember,鈥 she said. 鈥淲hen students see a question on an exam, it can trigger that memory of the game they played and help them recall the right answer.鈥
Her proudest teaching moment came during a round of Natural Selection Monopoly in her Biology 101 class. 鈥淭hey were so excited and competitive about their biomes and offspring,鈥 she said. 鈥淚t was just really cute watching them get into it.鈥
Voorhees hopes more people realize how effective this approach can be. 鈥淚t takes a lot of time to make these games, but it鈥檚 worth it to see students so engaged and having fun while learning,鈥 she said.
For Professor Voorhees, it鈥檚 not just about teaching biology, it鈥檚 about making learning something students look forward to.