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Thread: Did your school use the PlayStation Lightspan games?

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    Late to the party DigitalSpace's Avatar
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    Default Did your school use the PlayStation Lightspan games?

    I don't think I've ever read anything here about anyone actually playing any of the Lightspan games at their school.

    This is a question for the younger members and any teachers that may be out there. I figure most DP'ers are too old (though we didn't miss out - if you're like me, you got some considerable time with Oregon Trail and Number Munchers), but if you knew of a local school using these (or acquired Lightspan games for your collection from said school), feel free to chime in.

    For those of you who played them in your school, what was it like?

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    Cherry (Level 1) Kamisama's Avatar
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    Hmm, in fact I never heard of this. And I've been too 3 different school in the last years. Dunno since when it's out o:

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    Crono (Level 14) Pantechnicon's Avatar
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    They were after my time. I didn't even know such things existed until I was doing some computer support work once at a BIA-run boarding school out in the boonies west of Albuquerque. I walked through a couple of classrooms where I saw the kids, each with a personal PSOne/LCD combo no less, playing these edumacational games. I was surprised with both the fact that these games existed, to say nothing of the largesse implied in a school where every kid gets his own Playstation.

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    Back in my day we had BBC Micros at School. And if we were lucky, we got to play with the 'Turtle' robot. Later on they upgraded to Archimedes. We didn't even get proper PCs till halfway through the final year.

    So how educational are these Lightspan games? Are they actually decent?

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    Late to the party DigitalSpace's Avatar
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    Here's some information on Lightspan from our very own Dangerboy:
    Link

    I've never played or seen any of the games myself. I do remember hearing about them on CNN in their heyday. "These kids are playing video games at school! But these aren't your normal video games..." I quickly forgot about them until I came across a post about them here on DP.
    Last edited by DigitalSpace; 05-16-2012 at 08:41 AM. Reason: Fixed link

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    Cherry (Level 1) dlopez9069's Avatar
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    ive never heard of these so im guessing they arent that great. im still in high school and instead of ps1s everyone got a brand new G4 apple laptop.(tons of people got suspended for porn) so i guess they arent that great either.

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    Ryu Hayabusa (Level 16) Rogmeister's Avatar
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    When I graduated, home video game systems hadn't even been introduced yet...

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    Having been doing the reviews / features on them, I can actually see why they bottomed out so quickly. Most of the games were either:

    a) Just videos from like, 1970+
    b) Odd interactive playsets that didn't quite gel with the controller
    c) Cool, but ultimately destroyed by poor load times and odd sequencing

    The worst part was that the numerical values of the Discs (i.e. Google 1, 2a, 2b, etc) didn't follow in the the actual order; you bounced around from each one depending on what the curriculum was.

    What *was* cool about the set was how much personality they gave some of the characters. The Mars Moose cast was the scholastic equivalent of the Shirt Tales gang, just without the T-Shirts, complete with Saturday morning like intro and some pretty good voice actors.

    I'm *still* trying to track down the modem, keyboard adapter (for a sane price), and LIghtspan Memory Card dongle so I can take a PSX online. Any leads in acquiring one will be graciously rewarded.

    Jason

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    No, they didn't. I'm pretty sure if there were PS1s in my school, I would've flipped.

    I think the reason Lightspan games are so rare, is because most schools don't give a shit about different learning techniques. Anything more than a chalkboard, a textbook, and the overhead projector, is a waste of money to most schools.

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    Seems interesting. The only things we ever got were interactive educational games for Windows and MACs throughout the years. One of my favorite classes was Computing Systems which consisted of "simuation training" using SimCity 2000 and playing Bugdom for some reason.

    Quote Originally Posted by Rogmeister View Post
    When I graduated, home video game systems hadn't even been introduced yet...
    We all know you've been around since before video games. Aren't you the one that came up with the idea and invented them?
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    Quote Originally Posted by Rogmeister View Post
    When I graduated, home video game systems hadn't even been introduced yet...

    Quote Originally Posted by cyberfluxor View Post
    We all know you've been around since before video games. Aren't you the one that came up with the idea and invented them?
    No, that was Al Gore. So close though!
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    Nah man. We used the Apple ][e straight up yo.

    I will school you in Number Munchers, find Carmen Sandiego, and give you dysentery on the Oregon Trail all in the same day.
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    All we had was TRS-80's and trash-80 model 4's.

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    C64's for us.
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    Quote Originally Posted by GrandAmChandler View Post
    Nah man. We used the Apple ][e straight up yo.
    When I was in elementary school, we had 1-2 of those in every classroom. They were usually reserved for the kids who got their work done the fastest, and as you may have guessed, Oregon Trail was the most popular game, with Number Munchers as a close second (especially in my fourth grade class, where we only had one copy of Oregon Trail).

    I moved to a different school in fifth grade, and all the Apple II's were in a computer lab.

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    We also had the Apple IIe computers with the fly monochrome green monitors. We had a whole computer lab in grade school. I think I was in 2nd grade when they introduced the computers. Oregon Trail was king...by far. I vaguely remember number munchers and they tried to force the typing tutor down our throats. I remember that I could type "a a a s s s sa as sass" or something at like 87 words per minute!

    The one game that was 2nd to Oregon Trail that we had was Odell Lake and Odell Woods. I can vividly remember that you played as a fish and you would have to make decisions on which fish you could eat or those that you had to stay away from. It was pretty fun!

    Wyatt

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    Quote Originally Posted by wyatt8 View Post
    The one game that was 2nd to Oregon Trail that we had was Odell Lake and Odell Woods. I can vividly remember that you played as a fish and you would have to make decisions on which fish you could eat or those that you had to stay away from. It was pretty fun!
    We had that as well. Some people were making some mutated hybrids that ate everything and would die simply from being energy hogs.
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    Was I the only one who used a Commodore PET in school?

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    I distinctly remember Apple IIc's and IIe's (I think there was one original Apple II, as well as one lone Apple IIgs) being used at my elementary school while I was there. Some of you have mentioned Oregon Trail, Number Munchers, and Where in the World Is Carmen Sandiego?...great memories there. I remember sitting in a 6th-grade classroom (when I was 6 years old...1st grade) and playing the aforementioned Carmen Sandiego. As for Number Munchers, I think I missed a total of 2 questions in the 300-500 hours I logged into that game in my first three years of school (kindergarten through 2nd grade).

    Back on topic, can't really say I know that much about Lightspan's games...they sound interesting from a collector's standpoint, though.
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    Quote Originally Posted by Dangerboy View Post
    I'm *still* trying to track down the modem, keyboard adapter (for a sane price), and LIghtspan Memory Card dongle so I can take a PSX online. Any leads in acquiring one will be graciously rewarded.

    Jason
    You mean this thing?

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