News

Schoolchildren to learn roadbuilding skills in Minecraft

Image: National Highways

Schoolchildren will be able to learn about everything road designers have to take into account in a set of real-world schemes modelled in the school version of the Minecraft game.

National Highways (formerly Highways England) has designed the programme for students aged 7-11 (key stage 2) and 11-14 (key stage 3), using real-world examples such as the proposed Lower Thames Crossing, A428 Black Cat to Caxton Gibbet improvements and the A303 at Stonehenge, according to BIM+.

Through the in-game activities students will get a sense of the range of skills used by National Highways to tackle major projects, including: archaeology, biology, ecology, civil engineering, communications technology and coding.

Register for free and continue reading

This is not a paywall. Registration allows us to enhance your experience across Construction Management and ensure we deliver you quality editorial content.

Registering also means you can manage your own CPDs, comments, newsletter sign-ups and privacy settings.

Story for CM? Get in touch via email: [email protected]

Latest articles in News