Skip to content
Education Training, Games Gaming

GAME CHANGERS: CAREER OPPORTUNITIES EXPLORED IN NEW GAMES EDUCATION SYMPOSIUM

Melbourne International Games Week 3 mins read

The inaugural Games Education Symposium, a free 2-day event on 3-4 October, will bring students, educators and industry professionals together to learn how digital games are improving educational outcomes in schools and explore the diverse career opportunities in a world where games touch many aspects of daily life.

Developed by the Victorian Government as a collaboration between Melbourne International Games Week (MIGW) and the Department of Education, the ‘Games Education Symposium: Careers and Frontiers’ is an exciting new addition to Asia Pacific’s largest digital games celebration.

MIGW 2024 promises a bigger and better celebration of games than ever before for its 10th anniversary edition. The Games Education Symposium is the natural extension of MIGW’s continued goal to foster connections between games enthusiasts and developers, and between the games industry and a wide range of other sectors.

Recognising the incredible potential of games in educational outcomes and the diverse career opportunities the digital games industry offers, this free-to-attend symposium will build strong pathways between secondary and tertiary students, educators and the local industry.

Day One of the symposium will connect secondary students and teachers with industry professionals to showcase the incredible array of career opportunities in the digital games industry. George Osborn, a leading expert in the intersection between video games and the wider world, will deliver a keynote on the use of games for social good and the unseen ways that video games influence the modern world: from US presidential elections to competition law to the fight against the climate crisis. A roundtable mentoring session will see game designers and developers at various stages of their careers share their professional journeys and the ‘things they wish they knew in high school’ with those looking to enter the industry.

The Day Two program will connect games studios and developers with tertiary institutes to look to the future of games. The Great Debate: Working in Games is Not a Real Job will see industry speakers in a healthy debate and a live feed link-up with a parallel conference in Denmark will address global trends in games education. International keynote speaker Dries Deryckere, from Howest University (Belgium), will delve into creating the developer of the future: How do you train for a job that doesn't exist? A key highlight of day two is the Tertiary Hackathon, where tertiary students will harness the spirit of ‘games for good’ to develop positive solutions to real world challenges.

Both days will be jam-packed with talks and panels featuring local and international experts and will be a chance to network with local studios, tertiary providers and games leaders.

Minister for Creative Industries, the Hon. Colin Brooks MP, said: “Victoria is Australia’s digital games leader and as the global digital games industry continues to expand this symposium will ensure we remain at the forefront as a place that trains, fosters and retains the next generation of highly skilled, industry-ready games leaders.”

Deputy Premier and Minister for Education, Ben Carroll said: “We are thrilled to back this symposium and we encourage students, educators and anyone curious about a career in the games industry to take advantage of this free and inspiring event.”

The Games Education Symposium is an initiative of the Victorian Government, made in collaboration with Melbourne International Games Week and the Department of Education.


Key Facts:

The free, two-day ‘Games Education Symposium: Careers and Frontiers’ will take place on 3-4 October as part of Melbourne International Games Week.

Click here for more information and registrations, or find out more about MIGW at gamesweek.melbourne


Contact details:

For more information or to request interviews, please contact:
Bec Bridges on [email protected] or 0405 655 245, or
Terri King on [email protected] or 0488 036 740.

Download the media release in full here.

IMAGES
MIGW images are available for media use here.

Media

More from this category

  • Education Training, Employment Relations
  • 17/02/2026
  • 11:48
National Tertiary Education Union

Universities must act to stamp out shocking racism against staff

A landmark study into racism at Australian universities has exposed appalling levels of discrimination in university workplaces, with the vast majority of staff who complained about racism dissatisfied with how universities handled their concerns. The Australian Human Rights Commission's Respect at Uni study - the first comprehensive national investigation of its kind - found that one in five academic staff experienced direct racism at their workplace, with racism most commonly occurring in work meetings and shared staff spaces. National Tertiary Education Union President Dr Alison Barnes said the findings were deeply disturbing for staff and students. "This report shines a…

  • Education Training, Government Federal
  • 17/02/2026
  • 11:00
Tuesday 17 February 2026

Landmark study finds racism is widespread and systemic at Australian universities

Findings from the Australian Human Rights Commission’s landmark nationalRacism@Uni Study highlight that racism is deeply embedded across Australian universities and has profound impacts on students and staff. More than 76,000 students and staff from 42 universities across the country participated in the Study. The Study findings reveal particularly high rates of racism are experienced by students and staff from First Nations, African, Asian, Jewish, Māori, Middle Eastern, Muslim, Palestinian and Pasifika backgrounds. The findings also show high rates of racism experienced by international students. Race Discrimination Commissioner, Giridharan Sivaraman said the findings of the Racism@Uni Study are deeply troubling and…

  • Childcare, Education Training
  • 17/02/2026
  • 05:15
Independent Education Union of Australia NSW/ACT Branch

Union win: Fair Work Commission backs pay rises for preschool teachers

17 February 2025 The union representing teachers in early childhood education and care in NSW and the ACT calls on the NSW government to respect yesterday’s Fair Work Commission (FWC) recommendation and boost funding for community preschools to lift the pay and conditions of teachers and educators. The FWC on 16 February 2026 accepted the union’s argument that the state government needs to review and boost the funding for community preschools so they can provide long overdue pay rises. “The NSW government must accept the umpire’s recommendation and immediately fund pay rises that properly value the work of staff in…

  • Contains:

Media Outreach made fast, easy, simple.

Feature your press release on Medianet's News Hub every time you distribute with Medianet. Pay per release or save with a subscription.