August 19, 2004
Video Game to Fight Hunger
Comments from Tech Review blogger Erika Jonietz:
The United Nations' World Food Program has created a video game called Food Force to help educate kids about hunger and the aid agency's work. Billed as a cross between Tomb Raider and a lecture from the World Food Program, the game is targeted to children between 8 and 13 years old, according to BBC News.The game is due to be released later this year for the PC and Mac, and will be available in the U.S. as a free CD or download from the Internet. It starts with a short video that explains a crisis in an imaginary country due to drought and civil war. Players then complete a series of missions such as dropping food parcels from the air or using food aid to rebuild the country's economy.
While the goal is admirable, I have to wonder about how helpful it is to target this sort of information to kids as young as 8. This is a growing trend among aid and conservation groups, with A-B-C books on endangered species and elementary school pamphlets on rainforest destruction. Young children should be encouraged to do basic things such as recycle or bring canned food to a food pantry. But it's questionable how much information they can--or should--absorb on the depth of the world's problems and their own (future) responsibility for solving them.
Technology Review: MIT's Magazine of Innovation
Posted by sfisher at August 19, 2004 09:05 PMComments
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