星空无限传媒

JCSU Esports and Gaming: Changing the Game

Gaming Day 2024

Charlotte, N.C./April 27, 2024 - The 星空无限传媒 Esports and Gaming program continues to break new ground and carve out fresh territory in Charlotte. On Saturday, April 27, Esports and Gaming faculty and staff welcomed up to 30 middle and high school students from near and far, from the Charlotte Metro area to Greensboro, N.C. The event was called STEM and STEAM: Changing the Game through Esports and Gaming.听听

JCSU Instructor John Cash says, 鈥淭his isn鈥檛 a one-and-done thing.听We have already held 25 community-related events since January with the Johnson C. Smith Esports and Gaming program.鈥

Image
Student playing desktop game 2024
A student plays a game during the STEM and STEAM: Changing the Game program. Photo by Dr. Cheryl Butler-Brayboy.

The NC Science Festival was a collaboration with JCSU Esports and Gaming. The partnership created a rare opportunity for JCSU gamer-scholars to teach what they know on the big stage.

Cash says the Esports and Gaming program in the College of Business and Professional Studies has led to several leadership opportunities for students, including this event:听

鈥淥ur gamer-scholars serve as ambassadors of the JCSU program on this high-profile platform,鈥 Cash says. 鈥淔our gamer scholars serve as leaders to introduce local middle and high school students to Esports and Gaming careers.鈥

Cash says STEM and STEAM: Changing the Game through Esports and Gaming event creates a statewide platform for JCSU鈥檚 Sci-Tech curriculum.听听It is about showing students the correlation between academic concepts in STEM with applications in the world of gaming. Cash says the numbers are startling:听

鈥淚n the fields of game design and development, people of color make up less than 2 percent of the workforce.鈥澨齀n contrast, Cash says, 鈥淓ighty-two percent of Black Americans 18 to 24 years old are gaming weekly vs. 73 percent in the general population.鈥

Cash contends currently, people of color are consumers but not owners in the gaming space, adding, 鈥淲e over-index in gameplay and consumption but we are not engaged in production. [As a community] we are behind in education, internships and jobs in gaming.鈥澨

An event like this one allows young gamers of color to re-think their career trajectories.听Cash says it is not all about delayed gratification. Instead, 鈥淵ou can have these opportunities now.鈥澨

Computer programming and AI are two careers where opportunities abound, according to Cash.听As a result, the professor has put four areas of gaming on the wish list for curriculum development and career preparedness for students: game design, game development, AI and Cybersecurity.

Image
Gaming Day 2024

For students, the benefits extend beyond the classroom. JCSU STEM student Shaun Moore says Esports and Gaming competitions have given him increased confidence.

鈥淓sports is where we take traditional gaming like Street Fighter or Roblox and we compete against other schools鈥. I think that鈥檚 why it is exciting for us.听We get to go on trips and compete against other people. Whenever we win, we do get to keep听[the] money or prizes.鈥

Right now, the JCSU Esports and Gaming Management minor is growing in popularity on campus and community-wide interest in the cutting-edge program is increasing steadily. Dr. BerNadette Lawson-Williams and professor Cash plan to extend the current program to include the current focus on Esports and STEM plus Esports and communication and Esports and marketing. The faculty is carving out more internships for students with the Charlotte Hornets, the Venom, and other high-profile corporate partners.听

For now, the JCSU Esports and Gaming minor is the only college-level program of its kind in Charlotte. With interest growing and momentum building, that fact is sure to change.听From the looks of those gathered for STEM and STEAM: Changing the Game through Esports and Gaming, young people in the Carolinas are hungry and ready. Good luck, have fun!


Related Articles

Group photo with Dr. TerZa Lima-Neves holding her book
星空无限传媒 professor, Dr. Terza Lima-Neves, wanted to write a book that would highlight the people of her beloved Cape Verde. She wanted to move beyond rudimentary academic treatment to a discussion that would honor the musicality of authentic Cape Verdean voices.听 She wanted to write a book, her second, that would honor the depth of history and cultural expression of her people.听
View Content