Cultivating Civic Competence: Simulations and Skill-Building in an Introductory Government Class

I examine the impact of simulations on student learning and on the growth of civic competence in an introductory American government class. By civic competence, I refer to an individual's skill and ability to make sense of vast amounts of political information; to work with others (and in civil...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of political science education 2008-01, Vol.4 (1), p.1-20
1. Verfasser: Bernstein, Jeffrey L.
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description I examine the impact of simulations on student learning and on the growth of civic competence in an introductory American government class. By civic competence, I refer to an individual's skill and ability to make sense of vast amounts of political information; to work with others (and in civil opposition to other people's ideas) where appropriate; and to develop effective strategies for political action. The simulations I describe here are successful in building political skills for students, albeit with some limitations seen across sex and racial lines. Students emerge from the class more confident in how well they can handle the tasks that effective civic participation requires. What is more, I show that their feelings of confidence are driven largely by the skills they have attained and not by the objective political knowledge they have gained. These results provide strong evidence that we ought to reconsider how we teach students in the introductory American government class.
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source Worldwide Political Science Abstracts; Education Source; Political Science Complete
subjects Citizen Participation
Citizenship Education
citizenship skills
Civics
College Students
Democratic Values
Gender Differences
Knowledge
Michigan
Political Action
political learning
Political Science
Political Science Education
Racial Differences
scholarship of teaching and learning
Simulation
simulations
Skill Development
Skills
United States Government (Course)
title Cultivating Civic Competence: Simulations and Skill-Building in an Introductory Government Class
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