SimLife
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| The Software |
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| Title: | SimLife | Copyright date: | 1992 |
| Publisher: | Maxis | Cost | $59.95 |
| Computer: | DOS, Windows, Macintosh | Requirements: |
DOS:IBM 386 & above; 16 MHz; VGA monochrome monitor; 2 MB RAM (4MB
recommended) and hard disk required; MS-DOS 3.1 or above; Mouse required Windows:IBM 386 & above; 20 MHz; VGA monitor; 4 MB RAM & hard disk required; Windows 3.0 or above; Mouse required Mac:SE and above; Color or Monochrome; 2.5MB RAM for Monochrome; 3MB of RAM for Color; hard disk required; System 6.0.2 or above; System 7.0 compatible |
| Distribution: | Floppy Disks (2) | ||
| The Reviewer |
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| Name: | Sherri McCarthy-Tucker | college: | Chandler/Gilbert Community College |
| Date: | March 19, 1995 | Discipline(s) taught: | Psychology, Honors Forum and English Humanities |
| Evaluating the Computer Game |
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| STATEMENT | RATING | ||||
| Excellent | Good | Fair | Poor | N/A | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1. The directions for the program are: | x | ||||
| 2. The program's screen design was: | x | ||||
| 3. The ease of use of this program was: | x | ||||
| 4. Help provided within this program was: | x | ||||
| 5. The degree to which the content was up to date was: | x | ||||
| 6. The degree to which the program represented the diversity of our student population was: | x | ||||
| 7. On the whole, the program was: | x | COMMENTS |
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| Evaluating the Instructor
Materials | |||||
| STATEMENT | RATING | ||||
| Excellent | Good | Fair | Poor | N/A | |
| 1. The directions in the instructor guide was: | X | ||||
| 2. Learning objectives of the lessons were: | X | ||||
| 3. The organization of the lesson was: | X | ||||
| 4. The appropriateness of lessons for college level student was: | X | ||||
| 5. The assessment/discussion questions at the end of the lessons were: | X | ||||
| 6. The completeness of the teaching materials was: | X | ||||
| 7. On the whole, the instructor guide was: | X | COMMENTS |
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Evaluating the Program as a Tool for Teaching and Learning
Very difficult for me to use at the college level - perhaps appropriate at middle school level in natural science classes for AP students. Too complex and time consuming to justify the benefit. It could (with lots of instructor prep included) PERHAPS be used in Honors Forum to address the theme of 'Technology & Humanity' - specifically genetic engineering - perspective, but the time required to do this appropriately would make it a prohibitive means of doing so.
As stated above, it may be useful in botany, in jr. high/high school science classes, and perhaps in physics, with instructor attention, to illustrate scientific methodology and systems theory. It should not be used for these purposes in biology or psychology, however, because of the misinformation regarding the relationship between traits and genes.
Because of the problems noted above, it was not effective. Also, the 'smite' feature, and some of the comments regarding it in the tutorial, devalues life and promotes violence and a 'disposability mentality'. That, alone, would be enough to prevent me from endorsing it for use in any educational capacity.
Many cited above, namely 1) inaccurate information about relationship between genes and traits/behaviors; 2) very time intensive, what could be imparted much easier in other ways and via other programs; 3) devaluation of plant and animal life inherent in the program design; 4) difficult with tutorial (glitches in the program itself); 5) level of complexity too high; level of information too low - not a developmental match here.
Generally, no.