Cuenca López, José MaríaMartín Cáceres, Miriam JoséUniversidad de Huelva. Departamento de Didáctica de las Ciencias y Filosofía2011-02-232011-02-232010-11Cuenca López, J.M., Martín Cáceres, M.: "Virtual games in social science education". Computers & Education 55 (3): 1336-1345, nov. 20100360-1315http://hdl.handle.net/10272/4394The new technologies make the appearance of highly motivating and dynamic games with different levels of interaction possible, in which large amounts of data, information, procedures and values are included which are intimately bound with the social sciences. We set out from the hypothesis that videogames may become interesting resources for their inclusion in the education processes in formal contexts. Videogames become laboratories for social experimentation where the scenarios, conditions and situations affecting a given human phenomenon are reproduced. In this article, 35 videogames are analysed to find out which contents can be approached through them for the teaching of Social Sciences using problem-solving strategies. To this end, instruments for information gathering (data collection grid) and analysis (category system) were designed. The different contents of a social nature are analysed according to the study categories and in turn from the areas of social issues detected in them. We present a working proposal for the use of videogames in the classroom on the basis of resolution of relevant problems, determining which are the issues that we consider relevant, what questions the pupils can be asked to approach through videogames and what the characteristics, benefits and obstacles are in the use of these resources in the teaching of Social Sciences.engAtribución-NoComercial-SinDerivadas 3.0 Españahttp://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/3.0/es/Tecnología educativaInternet en educaciónApplications in subject areasImproving classroom teachingInteractive learning environmentsPedagogical issuesTeaching/learning strategiesVirtual games in social science educationjournal articleopen access