Global Citizens Are Made, Not Born: Multiclass Role-Playing Simulation of Global Decision Making

Globalization, global citizenship, and political engagement have become such buzzwords and clichés that we often lose the sense of their meaning. Global citizenship in particular is an elusive concept to operationalize. This article proposes to look at three dimensions of global citizenship: legal (...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of political science education 2011-07, Vol.7 (3), p.245-274
Hauptverfasser: Levintova, Ekaterina, Johnson, Terri, Scheberle, Denise, Vonck, Kevin
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container_end_page 274
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container_start_page 245
container_title Journal of political science education
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creator Levintova, Ekaterina
Johnson, Terri
Scheberle, Denise
Vonck, Kevin
description Globalization, global citizenship, and political engagement have become such buzzwords and clichés that we often lose the sense of their meaning. Global citizenship in particular is an elusive concept to operationalize. This article proposes to look at three dimensions of global citizenship: legal (rights and obligations), psychological identification with the global community, and political ones. Heeding the calls to wed traditional liberal education with the experiential learning in pursuit of developing students' global values and competencies, we devised and implemented a simulation called the Global Summit on Sustainability, an active learning assignment we run in large, general education survey classes (Global Politics and Introduction to American Government & Politics) populated by mostly nonpolitical science majors. The total number of students involved in the summit range from 225 to 360 each semester. But how does having a Global Summit influence the development of global citizenship and its three dimensions in large general education undergraduate political science classes? By using (1) instructor observations at the summit; (2) statistical analyses of pre- and postsummit surveys; and (3) a qualitative review of students' written assignments, we find that the Global Summit influences the development of global citizenship skills.
doi_str_mv 10.1080/15512169.2011.590075
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source Education Source; Political Science Complete; Worldwide Political Science Abstracts
subjects Active Learning
Assignments
Citizens
Citizenship
Citizenship Education
Civil Rights
College Faculty
Cultural Awareness
Decision Making
Experiential Learning
Global Approach
global citizenship
Globalization
Identification (Psychology)
Introductory Courses
Learning
Nonmajors
political engagement
Political Science
Quantitative Methods
Role Playing
role-playing simulation
Simulation
Skill Development
Statistical Analysis
Students
Summits
Teacher Attitudes
Teaching Methods
title Global Citizens Are Made, Not Born: Multiclass Role-Playing Simulation of Global Decision Making
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