Categories: Uncategorized

Educators Savvy Enough To Teach With Portals, Says Valve

This month Valve has announced that it will be offering teachers free copies of Portal 2, the studio’s first person puzzle title and 2010 game of the year, along with a version of Steam specifically designed for the classroom. The new program, called Teach With Portals, will allow teachers to create custom lessons within the game on a variety of subjects, including physics, math, chemistry, game design, language arts, and more. Once a teacher applies for the Steam for Schools program, they will be given access to free digital copies of Portal 2, including the new level editor, along with prepared lesson plans and a teachers-only community forum where educators can discuss the ways in which they’re teaching with portals. According to Valve, the creation of Steam for Schools was a direct response to teachers who were looking to use the innovative gameplay of the puzzle game to bring interactive lessons to their students. “We heard loud and clear from hundreds of educators that they wanted a place to learn about and share compelling, engaging and creative content for using Portal and Portal 2 in their classrooms,” the company said.

Portal 2 seems like a truly ideal platform for creating fun, interactive lessons for students. The newly-released level editor is incredibly straightforward and intuitive enough for most any users to be able to start creating puzzles of their own in no time, and Valve’s Source engine, which powers each title released by the Seattle studio, isn’t intensive enough to outpace most current computer systems. Additionally, the Portal franchise is not violent or profane, making it a suitable teaching platform for students of all ages. As a service, Steam is also a perfect fit for the classroom environment. The digital distribution service will allow students to easily access the game on whatever computer they’re currently using — even at home — providing Cloud storage where they can immediately grab the most current lesson plan through the Steam workshop. In order to gain access to the free program, teachers only need to provide their school information, along with the subject and number of participating students. Head over to TeachWithPortals.com to find out more about Valve’s latest innovative initiative.

Techli

Edward is the founder and CEO of Techli.com. He is a writer, U.S. Army veteran, serial entrepreneur and chronic early adopter. Having worked for startups in Silicon Valley and Chicago, he founded, grew and successfully exited his own previous startup and loves telling the stories of innovators. Email: Edward.Domain@techli.com | @EdwardDomain

Share
Published by
Techli

Recent Posts

Houston-based startup announces integration of orbital biomedical OS to advance biological discovery in low Earth orbit

Commercial space station developer Starlab Space announced this week that it has partnered with Helogen…

5 días ago

What the launch of Revenue OS by ADvendio signals for the future of agentic advertising

It won't come as a surprise that agentic AI holds tremendous promise for the advertising…

1 semana ago

Billdr relaunches as new “OS” for construction back office, raises $3.2 million

Software company Billdr, which is building the AI-native operating system for construction, announced in late…

2 semanas ago

Ness appoints new CTO to ATONIS to bring intelligent engineering to enterprises

AI has long promised to unlock widespread operational efficiencies, automate workflows and generate key business…

3 semanas ago

Crescite Bets on Faith-Driven Finance With Catholic USD™, a New Kind of Stablecoin

Crescite Innovation Corporation is entering the stablecoin space with an approach that challenges the dominant…

4 semanas ago

AI maintenance startup Fracttal raises $35 million to scale predictive asset management

Fracttal, a leading company in AI-powered maintenance solutions, announced on Wednesday it has closed a…

1 mes ago