Lesson Plan - Is Playing Video Games a Sport? 

Learning Objective

Students will evaluate reasons and evidence supporting each side of a debate about whether playing video games is a sport.

Text Structure

Argument

Content-Area Connections

Debate, English Language Arts

Standards Correlations

CCSS: RI.4.1, RI.4.2, RI.4.3, RI.4.4, RI.4.5, RI.4.6, RI.4.7, RI.4.8, RI.4.9, RI.4.10, L.4.4, SL.4.1, W.4.1

NCSS: Science, Technology, and Society

TEKS: ELAR 4.10

1. Preparing to Read

Watch a Video: Video Games: Then and Now
Discuss: What are some ways that video games have changed over time?

Preview Words to Know
Project the online vocabulary slideshow and introduce the Words to Know.

  • enthusiasts 
  • exerting


Set a Purpose for Reading
As students read, have them think about how esports are similar to and different from traditional sports.

2. Close-Reading Questions

1. What’s the purpose of the paragraph about Brady Donbeck at the start of the article?
The purpose is to get readers’ attention by comparing Rocket League with traditional sports. In Rocket League. Brady plays every day, practices with teammates, and competes. But he does it on his computer, not on a field.
(RI.4.5 CRAFT & STRUCTURE)

2. Why does Daniel Kane compare esports to skateboarding?
Kane compares esports to skateboarding to emphasize the idea that what counts as a sport changes over time. Skateboarding was once not taken seriously; now it’s an Olympic sport.
(RI.4.8 REASONS AND EVIDENCE)

3. Summarize why some people do not think playing video games is a sport.
Some people argue that video games don’t require enough physical exercise to count as sports and that esports are more similar to games like chess than they are to traditional sports.
(RI.4.2 SUMMARIZING)

3. Skill Building

FEATURED SKILL: Opinion Writing
Use the Skill Builder “Seeing Both Sides” to have students plan and write an opinion paragraph based on the debate. 
(W.4.1 OPINION WRITING)

Text-to-Speech