


OS X version Leopard 10.5.8, Snow Leopard 10.6.3, or higher.If you’re skeptical, Valve put together a video which shows exactly how it’s being used by one 7th grade classroom:Ĭheck it out yourself, the system requirements are relatively basic and it should run on most recent Macs: Using interactive tools like the Portal series to draw them in makes physics, math, logic, spatial reasoning, probability, and problem-solving interesting, cool, and fun which gets us one step closer to our goal-engaged, thoughtful kids!

One of the biggest challenges in teaching science, technology, engineering, and math is capturing the students’ imaginations long enough for them to see all of the possibilities that lie ahead. It’s eye-opening to see how video games can be used in amazing and unexpected ways to help educate our next generation. Today, innovative educators are finding ways to incorporate Portal™ and Portal 2 into their classrooms-helping teach physics and critical-thinking skills. How cool is that? This blurb from their website explains further: Here’s the interesting part: the game is offered as a free download until Septemas part of the “Learning with Portals” program, where some schools are using the popular video game to help teach physics and critical thinking skills. Portal runs in both Mac OS X and Windows, and once it’s in your Steam account you can download it on other machines if you want. Download Portal from Steam by going here and clicking the big green “Install Game” button
