HACKER Q&A
📣 amichail

Why don't schools allow students to "spend" their grades on indie games?


Schools could work with indie game developers to allow students to "spend" their school grades on indie games. The higher their grades, the more they can spend.

Indie game developers are always looking for ways to market their games, and giving away some content for free in this way would probably be worth it for many of them.


  👤 dave4420 Accepted Answer ✓
What’s the overlap between “wants indie games” and “students who don’t work hard on their grades but could”?

There’s a danger that students will see indie games as being “games that aren’t good enough to be worth anything” which could be reinforced by them being given away by schools.

What would the schools get out of it?

If this worked, would it undermine students’ intrinsic motivation and set them up for failure further down the line?


👤 bediger4000
Because grades should not be viewed as rewards, but rather as an indicator that learning has taken place, both by students and teachers.

What you propose is something of a Goodhart's Law violation:

"When a measure becomes a target, it ceases to be a good measure"

Do we want an economy of grades, with all the unintended incentives that would give everyone participating?


👤 Philadelphia
This has been done with pizza, and books, and actual cash for at least 30 years. The results of trial programs haven’t been significant enough for it to spread.

👤 squircle
My feeling is the affordance students need to succeed would be better facilitated by project based learning goals. Why not give them credit for making games?