Video Game Teaches Kids Conflict Resolution

June 19, 2005 — -- It looks like an animated film, with chalk that talks and a worrisome worm. But it's the latest educational tool -- a video game used by teachers to show children how to handle conflict.

The creators of Cool School say it's a skill best learned at a young age.

"We can still catch them when they're receptive to this," said Kathy Hanson of the Federal Mediation and Conciliation Service, which has developed the game as part of its initiative to combat youth violence.

With a click of a mouse, kids choose a place in the school where trouble is brewing, such as a student cutting in line at the library. Students are given four choices to solve the problem, and then they are shown the consequences of their pick.

"I solved the problem by clicking the first one," said a 6-year-old at an elementary school in Urbana, Md. "Because if you talk it all out, you don't have to tell the teacher. You can figure it out and get friends again."

Reaching Kids Early

Studies show one in three elementary school children complain they are repeatedly teased, bullied, even hit. Educators say it is important to stop the aggression at this level before it escalates.

To try to reduce violence in schools, Congress turned to the agency with the most experience at handling conflict -- the Federal Mediation and Conciliation Service, which usually settles labor disputes. It determined a video game was the answer.

"Children these days, probably the best way to reach them is through technology," Hanson said.

At the elementary school where the program is being tested, the principal said that the more kids can solve their own problems, the more time teachers can spend teaching.

"Certainly, it creates a more positive learning experience in the classroom," said Connie Banes. It "allows the teacher to focus on instruction, as well as not having to deal with conflicts and discipline."

And it's a hit with the kids, who raved about it during a recent visit.

While Cool School is just a prototype, the federal government is now looking for private funding to get it into every classroom in the country.

ABC News' Laura Marquez reported this story for World News Tonight.