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Gabriela Gonçalves Barbosa; Ana Paula Maielo Silva; Elia Elisa Cia Alves; Cristina Carvalho Pacheco – Journal of Political Science Education, 2024
Active learning is an engaging way of teaching and even experienced professors may not know how to start implementing its techniques to make classes more dynamic. Teaching cases can be a very useful active method of instruction, as an opportunity to assign students roles in the case discussion, centering them as the protagonists of their own…
Descriptors: Public Policy, Foreign Policy, Active Learning, College Faculty
Stepp, Kyla K.; Castle, Jeremiah J. – Journal of Political Science Education, 2019
This short review demonstrates how the use of American Mock Trial Association (AMTA) case materials, both throughout intercollegiate competitions and in academic courses, can engage and invigorate students while teaching them crucial skills in a way that few other programs or activities can do. The AMTA case provided for the 2017-2018 academic…
Descriptors: Simulation, Court Litigation, Critical Thinking, Criminal Law
Druliolle, Vincent – Journal of Political Science Education, 2017
Simulations are traditionally divided into three phases, namely preparation, interaction, and debriefing. This article argues that the first phase has been neglected. The preparation phase is indeed widely seen as necessary but merely instrumental to the interaction phase of simulations rather than as a self-contained activity that may also…
Descriptors: Simulation, Active Learning, Policy Formation, Proposal Writing
Kalaf-Hughes, Nicole; Mills, Russell W. – Journal of Political Science Education, 2016
Much of the research on the use of simulations in the political science classroom focuses on how simulations model different events in the real world, including political campaigns, international diplomacy, and legislative bargaining. In the case of American Politics, many simulations focus on the behavior of Congress and the legislative process,…
Descriptors: Simulation, Political Science, United States Government (Course), Federal Legislation
Baranowski, Michael; Weir, Kimberly – Journal of Political Science Education, 2010
We argue that power roles can make a significant difference in how students experience in-class simulations. To test this, students who participated in Congressional simulations in one of the author's introduction to American politics classes were surveyed concerning their views of Congress, the legislative process, and the simulation experience.…
Descriptors: Leadership, Simulation, Active Learning, Political Power
Ripley, Brian; Carter, Neal; Grove, Andrea K. – Journal of Political Science Education, 2009
Model United Nations (MUN) provides a great forum for students to learn about global issues and political processes, while also practicing communication and negotiation skills that will serve them well for a lifetime. Intercollegiate MUN conferences can be problematic, however, in terms of logistics, budgets, and student participation. In order to…
Descriptors: Student Participation, International Organizations, Simulation, Case Method (Teaching Technique)
Elder, Laurel; Seligsohn, Andrew; Hofrenning, Daniel – Journal of Political Science Education, 2007
In January of 2004, we took 35 college students to Manchester, New Hampshire, where they were immersed in the crucial final weeks of the Democratic Presidential Primary as part of a course on the presidential election. This course required students to work on the campaign of their choice in the weeks leading up to the state's primary as well as…
Descriptors: Political Science, Experiential Learning, Citizen Participation, Instructional Effectiveness
Asal, Victor; Blake, Elizabeth L. – Journal of Political Science Education, 2006
Simulations, particularly human-to-human interactions, offer social science students the opportunity to learn from firsthand experience, and can be an important and useful addition to an educator's teaching repertoire. However, it can be difficult for an instructor to know how to structure a simulation environment to meet specific educational…
Descriptors: Political Science, Educational Technology, Simulation, Case Method (Teaching Technique)
McCartney, Alison Rios Millett – Journal of Political Science Education, 2006
Civic engagement is an area ripe for increased pedagogical attention in the discipline of Political Science. However, almost all efforts are limited to courses on local, state, and national government. We teach about the often intricate connections between domestic and international politics, but opportunities for students to research and practice…
Descriptors: Political Science, International Relations, Educational Opportunities, Citizen Participation
Shaw, Carolyn M. – Journal of Political Science Education, 2006
This article examines a role play scenario in which students actively learn about the challenges of negotiation by taking on the roles of different factions and international mediators in a three-way civil war. Students gain a greater appreciation for the complexities of negotiations both in terms of outcomes and process, and they may begin to…
Descriptors: War, Simulation, Role Playing, Case Method (Teaching Technique)
Baranowski, Michael – Journal of Political Science Education, 2006
Simulations are widely viewed to be effective pedagogical tools; however, evidence concerning their effects on student learning has been largely anecdotal or unsystematic in nature. In addition, most of the literature focuses on fairly complex simulations that require more class time and demand more of students than may be possible in many…
Descriptors: United States Government (Course), Simulation, Introductory Courses, Quasiexperimental Design
Austin, W. Chadwick; McDowell, Todd; Sacko, David H. – Journal of Political Science Education, 2006
This article describes an undergraduate simulation that formulates Iraqi regimes following the removal of Saddam Hussein's Baathist regime. This exercise reinforces student comprehension and awareness for a range of legal and political topics--including group decision making, international law, diplomacy, and human rights--by actively engaging the…
Descriptors: Social Problems, Political Science, Educational Objectives, Citizenship Education
Longo, Nicholas V.; Drury, Christopher; Battistoni, Richard M. – Journal of Political Science Education, 2006
This article analyzes the comparative impact of three educational interventions aimed at increasing students' political engagement, two at the undergraduate level and one at the high school level. Findings from interviews with student participants in these programs indicate that political competencies are best acquired through democratic practice,…
Descriptors: Democratic Values, Intervention, Citizenship Education, Citizen Participation