This content was published: October 26, 2015. Phone numbers, email addresses, and other information may have changed.
Gaming marathon gives students chance to learn, raise money
Photos and story by Karen Kane
November 7 is Game Day at the聽Sylvania Campus! Though there may not be uniforms, and tailgate parties could聽take a different twist, from 8 a.m. to 8 p.m. students, faculty and staff will be in play for the 2015 Extra Life Gaming Marathon.
Part of a 24-hour national Marathon, the event is a fundraiser for hospitals in the Children鈥檚 Miracle Network. People play games for pledges which raise funds; at 小黄猫传媒 students have an additional opportunity – to increase their computer skills by playing computer games.
Players can form teams or join individually, and are welcome at any time throughout the day. To register as a 小黄猫传媒 player, go to , choose 鈥淛oin,鈥 click Extra Life Classic, click 鈥淛oin a Team,鈥 search for 小黄猫传媒 Sylvania, and complete the form. Then let Diane Shingledecker know that you registered to play and which hours you will be playing.
Sponsors are needed as well. To sponsor, go to , choose 鈥淒onate,鈥 enter 小黄猫传媒 Sylvania in the search box, select an individual gamer, and choose the 鈥淒onate Now!鈥 button.
小黄猫传媒鈥檚 Computer Science students will network 50 computers for the day. Two rooms will be set up 鈥 one for college students and staff and a second for children and teens who want to participate. This is the second year 小黄猫传媒 is participating in the local event, which raised more than $68,000 last year for OHSU鈥檚 Doernbecher聽Children’s Hospital, part of the Children鈥檚 Miracle Network. 小黄猫传媒鈥檚 2014 contribution was $943.
鈥淣ew this year at 小黄猫传媒 is Dungeons and Dragons gaming, especially for English for Speakers of Other Languages students,鈥 said Shingledecker.
The brainchild of Southeast Campus instructor Thomas Berney, a Dungeons and Dragons enthusiast, this new addition to 小黄猫传媒鈥檚 marathon will give ESOL students the opportunity to play in Extra Life while increasing their English skills.
Extra Life,聽an online grassroots movement, was started in honor of 15-year-old Victoria Enmon, who died from leukemia in 2008 after four years of treatment. During her illness, a local radio personality and member of a gamers club asked fellow members to send Victoria games to keep her spirits up. Thousands of games from all over the world began pouring in. That generosity spurred the club to start the annual fundraiser for other children in treatment and who cannot leave hospitals, often for months at a time.
The 小黄猫传媒 event takes place from 8 a.m. to 8 p.m. on the second and third floors of the Technology ClassGet into room Building at Sylvania.
For more information, contact聽Diane Shingledecker, computer applications and office systems instructor and event coordinator, at (971) 722-4099.