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POKEMON

How Pokémon Go could be used in Norway schools

Just because Norwegian students will soon be returning to the classroom doesn’t mean they have to stop playing the augmented reality phone game Pokémon Go. At least not if it is up to Tobias Staaby, a teacher at Bergen's Nordahl Grieg High School.

How Pokémon Go could be used in Norway schools
Pokémon Go players in Hordaland. Photo: Erik Johansen/NTB Scanpix
Staaby thinks that Pokémon Go, which combines GPS positioning with 3D graphics to allow users to hunt little virtual monsters in the real world, could be a natural learning tool in Norwegian classrooms. 
 
Staaby specializes in using games to educate and said there are a number of ways Pokémon Go could help students learn in a fun way. 
 
“For me, the appeal of the game lies much in the database the game uses to place PokéStops and PokéGyms,” he told The Local. 
 
“Say I am teaching a unit on local history, which is a part of the history curriculum in Norwegian schools. Since many of the PokéStops  are linked to real world memorials, statues and other places of historical significance, I could easily imagine asking my students to write a short article on the PokéStops close to where they live or where they normally hang out with their friends,” he explained. 
 
Staaby said that the game could use be used in math class. 
 
“Students could be given a task that asks them to find the most effective PokéStop route through a geographical area, or to measure the statistical chances of getting more than three items when spinning a PokéStop, of hatching a rare Pokémon in an egg, and so on,” he said. 
 
With Pokémon Go a massive phenomenon in Norway and around the world, Staaby said educators could use it to reach students in a way that traditional methods cannot. 
 
“I would never use a game as the only teaching tool in any given unit, but if used correctly, it can become a very valuable addition,” he said. 
 
The educator is no stranger to using pop culture in the classroom. In 2014, he received international attention for using the zombie video game The Walking Dead to teach his students about ethics
 
Staaby told The Local that he didn’t have any concrete plans to use Pokémon Go when school starts up “but that could easily change over the weeks to come.”
 
He first shared his thoughts on the game’s classroom opportunities with national broadcaster NRK and other educators were warm to the idea. 
 
“Pokémon Go or other commercial games can have many positive educational aspects,” Eirik Jåtten, the rector at Revheim School in Stavanger, told NRK. “Games aren’t for all teachers but games can be a part of a larger method selection that can used to create positive learning for individual students.”
 
Pokémon Go has become such a sensation in Norway that newspaper VG has launched a dedicated feature to bring real-time coverage of all Pokémon-related news worldwide. And just last month, two grown men in Sandefjord got into a fight over the game sending one to hospital with a head wound. 
 
The game has sent players exploring in little visited areas all over the world, leading to the discovery of corpses in Denmark and the US. 
 
But the roaming has also led to a spate of injuries, with around two people daily coming to the emergency ward with Pokémon-related injuries in Oslo alone. 
 
In Denmark, a 21-year-old Pokémon hunter was killed last month when he was run over by a delivery vehicle while the app was running on his phone. 
 
Also in Denmark, an IT company has tried to lure employees to a vacant position by offering to pay their salary in Pokémon Go coins and Powerballs

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POKEMON

French mayor bans Pokemon Go app from his village

Bressolles, a small village almost smack bang in the middle of France, has become the first in France to try and ban the new gaming sensation Pokemon Go.

French mayor bans Pokemon Go app from his village
Photo: AFP
The mayor of Bressolles, Fabrice Beauvois, believes Pokemon Go is simply too much of a threat to his 800-strong community. 
 
He made headlines on Wednesday after signing a municipal decree to ban the game, and he reportedly contacted the game's producer Niantic in an effort to get the village wiped off the Pokemon map, reported Le Progres newspaper
 
Beauvois said that the game caused “too much distraction for pedestrians and for motorists who are looking at their phones while driving”.
 
He said that he believed it was his duty to prevent what he called “a contagious and uncontrolled spread of the phenomenon”, not to mention that it is “dangerously addictive” for young people.
 
He also called for people to form evening groups in a bid to help prevent people from playing the game. 
 
 
While such a ban might be hard to enforce without the help of Niantic, the mayor is not wrong to think the game can be dangerous.

Indeed, France has already seen several accidents involving motorists and Pokemon. 
 
In July France saw at least two car accidents because of the game. And some teens were arrested in southern France for bursting into a police barracks trying to hunt Pokemon
 
And while no village or town in France has managed to ban the game yet, it has been banned from certain sites. 
 
Earlier this month, a French World War I memorial was removed from Pokemon Go following complaints about players gathering to do battle at a site containing the remains of 130,000 soldiers.
 
Elsewhere, authorities in Iran banned the app over unspecified “security concerns”, with the Pentagon in the US urging its troops to avoid the game too.
 
French teens storm police barracks in hunt for PokemonPhoto: AFP
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