World-Domino

For ages: 16-18 – Languages: NL – Rating:⭐⭐⭐⭐ Free game.

Students explore how different forms of work are available to adults and how they are valued differently.

Prosperity and Fundamental Human Rights

Students explore how prosperity is unequally distributed across the world, including Belgium. Also how values and standards about work vary, depending on social and cultural backgrounds. They practice applying fundamental Human Rights and the Rights of the Child and explore the role of international organisations in promoting global well-being and peace.

Other linked categories:

Link to website: World Domino

Fair Climate Policy

For ages: 10-14 – Languages: NL-FR – Rating:⭐⭐⭐⭐ Free game.

In areas already affected by the climate crisis, droughts, floods, and storms are ruining many crops like grain, corn, vegetables, fruit, and coffee. This causes farmers to lose their main food and income. They become more vulnerable and poverty grows.

I Fight for a Fair Climate Policy

Pupils can explain why climate change poses a risk to farmers worldwide and express their indignation about this. They learn how to take action in their own local environments, explain why collective protest works and explain why fair trade rules contribute to the farmers’ risilience in relation to climate challenges.

Linked Catergories:

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Link to website: Fair Climate Policy

Children’s Rights Examined

For ages: 12-14 – Languages: NL – Rating:⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ Free game.

In this game, some pupils don’t get any outdoor playtime, and some aren’t allowed to have a fruit snack. The materials include icons of children’s rights, pictures, and assignments, along with teacher instructions. The activity focuses on reflection and understanding how the learners feel.

Do children not have the right to play?

In this game, the playtime bell doesn’t bring happy cheers. Don’t young people have the right to play? Explore with your class what their rights are. How do they feel when these rights are ignored? Find out which rights are important for young people around the world in a memory game.

Link to website: Children’s rights examined

Fair Income for Cocoa Farmers

For ages: 10+ – Languages: NL-FR –  Rating:⭐⭐⭐⭐ Free game.

In Western countries, many people earn more than a living income. But in the global South, many families do not earn enough. For example, a typical household in Ghana’s cocoa industry earns less than half a living income. In Ivory Coast, a similar family earns less than a third of a living income.

Fair Trade Lessons

Thank you for introducing your pupils to fair trade! This lesson plan enables you to teach about living income in one lesson. You’ll find useful background information for preparation, followed by an activity to use in class.

Link to website: Fair Income for Cocoa Farmers

Core Values Game ®

For ages: 12-99 – Languages: NL-EN -DE  Rating:⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ Paid game.

With the Core Values Game®, you discover your true priorities.

Explore various game modes to identify core values for yourself and others, link them to professions, and understand their daily significance and contributions to the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs). Engage in creative problem-solving together.

The game promotes meaningful conversations, provides enjoyment, and offers endless replayability. Tip cards add depth on topics like effective listening, creative thinking, future planning, and SDGs.

Ideal for citizenship lessons, career orientation, sustainable development projects, and introduction programs. Also useful for developing an educational vision (organizational development).

Includes a storage tin with 60 core value cards, 7 game variants, and 9 tip cards. Online resources include explanations of the core values, creative thinking techniques, and a detailed list of professions from A to Z.

Link to website: Core Values Game®

Rice Up

For ages: 16+ – Languages: NL – Rating:⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ Paid game.

From the will to achieve the Sustainable Development Goals more broadly and deeply, and to show the interplay between these goals, Willem Bennenbroek and Marieke van Hoof, together with Radboud University, came up with the game Rice Up. In this serious game, you as a player take on the role of a rice farmer in Rurori. You want enough money in the bank, food on your plate and a good future for your children in a healthy living environment. But, that turns out not to be so easy. Rice Up focuses on mapping the dynamics between SDGs. Gradually, this dynamic quickly shows itself in an interactive way.In order to explain the connections between the 17 SDGs, Cultural Anthropology lecturers at the Radboud University, Luuk van Kempen and Lau Schelpen decided to develop a board game. In this ‘serious game’ players experience the daily life of a rice farmer and learn how issues such as food security, farming practices and education interact.

In addition to the everyday choices you will face as a rice farmer in Rurori, your SDG knowledge will be tested and unexpected events will come your way. Knowledge questions are used to ask general information about the SDGs and the current status of these goals. Through event cards, players learn to anticipate their choices and master the system of the Sustainable Development Goals in a playful way. All choices have an effect on your community and your joint SDG score, which you can easily keep track of on our online dashboard. Players try to establish a sustainable future for Rurori together and develop a suitable strategy together. Players manage to achieve larger goals despite inequalities keep seeing? Remember: only together can we achieve the SDGoals.

Link to website: Rice Up

Goals2030

For ages: 10-12 – Languages: NL – Rating:⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ Paid game

“As experienced …………appeal to learners.” The assignments encourage creative thinking and motivate pupils to integrate their own input.

Citizenship education in practice

Do you want your pupils to participate enthusiastically and creatively in citizenship education? Download the free assignments for an impression of the materials on offer. The Goals2030 website offers step-by-step plans and more than 150 videos.

Link to website: Goals2030

Future Lab Game ®

For ages: 12-99 – Languages: NL-EN-DE – Rating:⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ Paid game.

The Future Lab Game®, together with the Core Values Game®, is part of the FutureLab. Schools can organise a FutureLabGame® themselves, but can also use both games separately and independently. The games are suitable for sustainability projects, career orientation programmes, or citizenship and mentoring classes.

Knowledge and awareness of the Sustainable Development Goals

This paid game is also suitable for adults, for example as a team game in companies. It promotes knowledge and awareness of the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs).

Link to website: Future Lab Game ®

Gender & Climate Justice

For ages: 16+ – Languages: NL-FR – Rating:⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ Free game.

The aim of this tool is to give young people a broader view and understanding of global issues linked to the climate crisis and gender inequality. The impact of gender on the climate debate is not sufficiently taken into account, which means that the problems that women face remain invisible.

Structural Inequality

The tool shows how gender inequality exposes women to the consequences of the climate crisis. However, this inequality is not innate. It is caused by the structural inequality that results from gendered social roles and discriminatory cultural habits and norms.

Link to website: Gender & Climate Justice