A Canadian gamer has partnered with his mom, a psychology professor at Grant MacEwan University, to self-publish a book in defense of gaming.
The 27-year-old Teace Snyder teamed up with his 65-year-old mother, Jayne Gackenbach, to write Play Reality, a book that examines the positive effects of video games and attempts to combat some of the common misconceptions about the way gaming affects our brains.
āHalf of the argument right now is based on misinformation, so a lot of the book (written in an edgy format for gamers) has to go directly to teach people what is fact and what theyāve been misled to believe, unfortunately,ā Snyder told the Edmonton Journal
Good thing itās written in an edgy format for gamers. I donāt know how weād read it otherwise. Still, itās nice to hear positive things about gaming from mothers (and psychology professor mothers at that).
āWhatās going on right now isnāt anomalous, itās quite typical,ā Snyder said to the Journal. āWhat we have is a new form of media that people donāt understand (like TV before it), so they jump on the bandwagon, denouncing it the worst thing in the world and itās going to ruin the next generation⦠But thatās not the case. Itās just going to change them, and itās important to understand those changes and to delve deeper into the research.ā
Edmonton mother and son play video games together, and write a book [Edmonton Journal
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