02 October 2019/Categories: CILT, Industry News, Active Travel & Travel Planning, Transport Planning
The app was created by Cardiff University academic Catherine Purcell, who worked with the University of South Wales to test the app and consult children in Newport on the look and feel of the game. It uses similar technology to Pokemon Go, a reality game where people catch animated creatures which appear like they are in the player's real-world location. Dr Purcell said the app, targeted at seven to nine-year-olds, has been developed "not to replace but to support and enhance existing road safety educational practices".
She said: "Through our research we know that educating children through the use of illustrated books or kerb-side practices can be highly time and resource intensive. "The more children get into the game, the more opportunity they have to understand the risks and make safer decisions about where and when to cross the road... "This is another means for schools to engage children in road crossing in a fun and interactive way." Sally Lines, from the charity Road Safety Trust, which is funding the app through a grant, said: "We believe it can make a difference to keeping children safer on the roads."
Source: BBC
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