Tuesday, July 26, 2011

The Boat U.S. Foundation educates boaters through game play

Excerpt from U.S. Coast Guard Proceedings of the Marine Safety & Security Council magazine by Mr. Chris Edmonston, Vice President, BoatU.S. Foundation for Boating Safety and Clean Water

In 1997, the foundation introduced one of the first NASBLA-approved online boating safety courses. This early foray into online education consisted entirely of text with a few static pictures. Unfortunately, slow download speeds left many users frustrated.

Flash Forward
Today, faster download speeds and improved computer capability allows the course to incorporate many interactive features such as animations and videos.

NavigateIt!
Advanced animations such as the “NavigateIt!” and “DockIt!” games allow students to take the “helm” of a boat and navigate through common boating scenarios. Rules and other boating standards are displayed and reinforced through game play.

Simulator
One recent development is a downloadable boating simulator based on the same technology used by the U.S. and Royal Navies for their training programs.

As with the online animations, a student is presented with numerous scenarios. Points are allotted at the start, and improper boat handling will quickly reduce the final score. Enter a naval restriction zone ... lose points.

Speed through a no-wake zone ... lose points.

While the simulator is a stand-alone product, the foundation is working to integrate it within the basic online boating course, making the online boating course as close as possible to on-the-water training.

For more information:

Full article is available at http://www.uscg.mil/proceedings/fall2010.

Subscribe online at http://www.uscg.mil/proceedings/subscribe.asp.





Modeling a day trip to “Walrus Island,” the BoatUs simulator challenges the student to navigate safely.

No comments:

Post a Comment

Comment Policy

We welcome your comments on postings at all Coast Guard sites/journals. These are sponsored by the U.S. Coast Guard to provide a forum to talk about our work providing maritime safety, security and stewardship for the American people to secure the homeland, save lives and property, protect the environment, and promote economic prosperity.

Please note: Anonymous comments have been disabled for this journal. It is preferred that you use your real name when posting a comment. WE WILL POST THE NAME YOU ENTER WHEN YOU SUBMIT YOUR COMMENT. Also, you are welcome to use Open ID or other user technologies that may be available.

All comments submitted are moderated and will be reviewed before posting. The Coast Guard retains the discretion to determine which comments it will post and which it will not. We expect all contributors to be respectful. We will not post comments that contain personal attacks of any kind; refer to Coast Guard or other employees by name; contain offensive terms that target specific ethnic or racial groups, or contain vulgar language. We will also not post comments that are spam, are clearly off topic or that promote services or products.

We will make our best effort to promptly post those comments that are consistent with the Comment Policy, but given the need to manage federal resources, moderating and posting of comments will usually occur only during regular business hours, Monday through Friday. Comments submitted outside of business hours will be read and posted as quickly as possible.