Precinct Reporter Group News

Top Menu

  • Precinct Reporter News
  • Food
  • Subscribe
  • Privacy Policy

Main Menu

  • Home
  • About
  • Contact Us
  • Read Our E-Edition
  • ADVERTISE
  • Subscribe
Sign in / Join

Login

Welcome! Login in to your account
Lost your password?

Lost Password

Back to login
  • Precinct Reporter News
  • Food
  • Subscribe
  • Privacy Policy

logo

Precinct Reporter Group News

  • Home
  • About
  • Contact Us
  • Read Our E-Edition
  • ADVERTISE
  • Subscribe
  • Young Visionaries 25-Year Push to Support IE Youth

  • Robin Thorne: Opportunities in Construction and Demolition

  • LA Olympic Games: A Lot of Money to Be Made

  • Lt. Gov Candidate Michael Tubbs Shares His Vision

  • Board of Equalization Seat in High Stakes Race

Latest PRGNews
Home›Latest PRGNews›Bringing History to Life

Bringing History to Life

By Precinct Reporter News
December 7, 2017
3738
0
Share:

By Megan Cole/UCI

Despite almost a decade in the gaming industry, UCI computer science professor Magda El Zarki has never worked on anything quite like “Sankofa.” The recently completed computer game – created by El Zarki and a colleague, UCI history professor Patricia Seed – follows a young protagonist navigating an unconventional environment for the gaming world: 18th-century Ghana.

The immersive visual software is an attempt to “bring the cultural history of Ghana to life through gameplay,” Seed says, while “providing a learning experience that you couldn’t get in any other way.”

Seven years in the making, “Sankofa” is a cross-disciplinary venture into educational computer gaming. It has already garnered interest from the Smithsonian Institution and the California African American Museum, and Seed hopes it’ll be widely implemented in libraries and schools – where it could be accessed by its target audience, middle schoolers and teens.

“Sankofa” gets its name from a word in Twi meaning “go back and seek it,” which, according to Seed, is how players of the interactive, three-dimensional game learn the history of the Asante Kingdom, a West African society located in modern-day Ghana.

Gamers follow a young girl as she wanders through the local marketplace; creates a storytelling cloth; and explores Asante folk tales, spirits and legends. The ethnographically authentic landscape allows players to discover aspects of 18th-century Ghanian life that they might not encounter in a classroom.

“It’s a unique game,” says El Zarki, director of UCI’s Institute for Virtual Environments & Computer Games. “The learning goals are different from other games, because this is really about teaching an underrepresented culture.”

Orange County is an international gaming hub, home to about 50 independent gaming companies, including giants Blizzard and Obsidian. The pool of talented game designers here is large, and many are part of the UCI community – such as Jessica Kernan, an industry professional and a staff member at UCI’s Institute for Virtual Environments & Computer Games who was also instrumental in the creation of “Sankofa.”

“I’m proud of ‘Sankofa’ because it brings people in the present, in different countries even, nearer to those in different times and places and helps us imagine other lives like our own,” Kernan says. “I hope that ‘Sankofa’ can scratch the surface of that and bring historic Ghana one step closer to players around the world.”

Most challenging in the development of the game, Seed says, was researching minute details of the period – “the type of coinage that was in use; the clothing that was worn; the flora, fauna and fish that existed.”

“All of that has to be historical,” she says. “It involves an immense amount of accuracy in terms of even what the environment looked like – and then, on top of that, you have to tell a story.”

Seed, whose scholarship centers on Dutch colonial history, found common ground with El Zarki, who is of Dutch and Egyptian descent. Their research for “Sankofa” frequently took them to Ghana, where they studied primary-source engravings and interviewed local experts to ensure the game’s authenticity.

“Sankofa” isn’t the first collaboration of this sort between El Zarki and Seed. The pair also created “Elmina,” a three-dimensional tour of a 15th-century Ghanian slave fort. The idea for “Sankofa” was born from a desire to expand the interactivity of the “Elmina” experience, as well as to “communicate the history of who lived around the slave fort and broaden the perspective of the community rather than focusing on the oppression of the fort,” Seed says.

Overall, “Sankofa” aspires to “provide students a window into cultural history,” according to Kernan, and “inspire them to seek more information about Ghana and share that information to excite others as well.”

Seed concurs: “We’re trying to improve the memory of history by presenting it in an imaginative way that actively engages students. Through augmented reality, we can bring history to life.”

TagsGhanaOrange CountySankofaTri-County BulletinUC Irvine
Previous Article

Urban Agriculture Incentive Zone Accepting Applications

Next Article

YES STEAM Workshop

0
Shares
  • 0
  • +
  • 0
  • 0
  • 0
  • 0

Precinct Reporter News

Related articles More from author

  • Latest PRGNews

    Domestic Violence Advocates Help Youth & Families

    August 3, 2023
    By Precinct Reporter News
  • Latest PRGNews

    Hate Crime Funding Helps Anti-Black Justice

    January 18, 2024
    By Precinct Reporter News
  • Latest PRGNews

    OC NAACP Moves Ahead on Justice Goals

    November 21, 2019
    By Precinct Reporter News
  • Latest PRGNews

    April Diversity Month: Equity in Hard to Reach Places

    April 4, 2024
    By Precinct Reporter News
  • Latest PRGNews

    Margo Malone: Missionary Calls for Kenya

    January 30, 2020
    By Precinct Reporter News
  • Latest PRGNews

    Marcus Garvey, Frances Murphy Enshrined in Gallery of Distinguished Publishers

    March 28, 2019
    By Precinct Reporter News

Leave a reply Cancel reply

You must be logged in to post a comment.

You might be interested

  • Latest PRGNews

    Black History Month Events: Cerebral, Creative and Fun

  • Latest PRGNews

    Scrubbing California Landmarks of Racist Symbols

  • Latest PRGNews

    Parents List LBUSD Concerns

Precinct Reporter News Group

Your local news resource for 50 years in the Inland Empire, Orange County, Long Beach and surrounding areas!

To subscribe or advertise, call 909.889.0597

About us

  • Broadcasting & Media Production Company
    357 W. 2nd Street
    San Bernardino, California, CA 92401
  • mailto:sales@precinctreporter.com
  • Recent

  • Popular

  • Young Visionaries 25-Year Push to Support IE Youth

    By Precinct Reporter News
    April 23, 2026
  • Robin Thorne: Opportunities in Construction and Demolition

    By Precinct Reporter News
    April 23, 2026
  • LA Olympic Games: A Lot of Money to Be Made

    By Precinct Reporter News
    April 23, 2026
  • Join our Recipe Competition!

    By PRGNews
    July 16, 2015
  • SB Budget Cuts CDBG

    SB CDBG Cuts Have Local Nonprofits Braced for the Worst

    By PRGNews
    July 16, 2015
  • Recipes …

    By PRGNews
    July 16, 2015

Follow us

  • Precinct Reporter News
  • Food
  • Subscribe
  • Privacy Policy
© Powered by Hotspotwebsites.net. All rights reserved.