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Teacher's games help students learn

Eunice Lee

Issue date: 1/23/08 Section: City
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As her fourth-grade class filed into the room, Karen Luciana announced they would play a game called Portrayal.

Several students pumped their fists and whispered excitedly.

Luciana pulled up her stool as students settled in their desks and took out blank sheets of paper. While looking at a game card, Luciana described a picture of a French waiter, mentioning everything from his thin mustache to the number of stripes on his shirt. The students, with their faces screwed in concentration, tried to replicate every detail on paper.

Afterward, excited voices filled the room as the children found out how many points they received for including different aspects of the picture.

"I almost got a 10," one student said. "What did you get?"

At least once a week, the students in Luciana's class at Lincolnwood Elementary School, 2600 Colfax St., play educational games. Portrayal helps develop their language arts and listening skills, while other games help sharpen critical thinking and strategy skills.

In her 16 years of teaching, Luciana has always played games with her students. She has a collection of more than 100 games, with which students can build skeletons, rhyme words and construct pyramids. Because of her use of games in the classroom, Luciana was one of three teachers in the country to win the first Golden Game Award on Nov. 17, 2007, said Mary Couzin, Executive Director of the Chicago International Toy and Game Fair, or Chi-Tag.

The award is co-sponsored by Chi-Tag and Jax Games.

"It made me feel a sense of pride to know that what I do every day makes a difference," Luciana said. "That it does matter to encourage children with fun as well as to encourage them with challenges."

Luciana was chosen because she exemplified "incorporating games not just in her classroom, but the rest of the school." Couzin said. Luciana and her students host a few events throughout the year where the whole school is invited to learn and play different educational games.
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