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Spencer Shanks; Jiakun Jack Zhang – Journal of Political Science Education, 2024
Simulations are increasingly recognized for promoting active learning and student engagement and fostering career skills. Yet whether and how simulations facilitate learning, engagement, or both are still subjects of considerable debate. Many existing studies tend to be observational in design, constrained to a single semester, or reliant on…
Descriptors: College Students, Simulation, Learning Activities, Learner Engagement
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Kitchen, Veronica – Journal of Political Science Education, 2022
As experiential learning becomes more central to undergraduate education, we must find ways to use it in large classes and to teach students how to learn from experiences. This article uses a 2-year study of student perceptions of learning from short, in-class games and simulations to show that these active learning activities can be used to…
Descriptors: Experiential Learning, Undergraduate Students, Educational Games, Simulation
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Bridge, Dave – Journal of Political Science Education, 2016
With so many role-playing simulations already in the political science education literature, the recent repeated calls for new games is both timely and appropriate. This article answers and extends those calls by advocating the creation of probabilistic games using Microsoft Excel. I introduce the example of the Stag Hunt Game--a short, effective,…
Descriptors: Spreadsheets, Educational Games, Probability, Role Playing
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Cowley, Philip; Stuart, Mark – Journal of Political Science Education, 2015
We have used a role-play exercise to help students understand the role of the whips in British parliamentary politics, a subject with which students often struggle. In itself, this proved a valuable learning and teaching tool, but we found it became even more useful when we incorporated a practitioner into the exercise. This overcame some of the…
Descriptors: Role Playing, Parliamentary Procedures, Learning Activities, Simulation
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Kollars, Nina A.; Rosen, Amanda M. – Journal of Political Science Education, 2013
Assessment through simulation is something that political science pedagogy has yet to explore in a robust manner. This article advances analysis of social science simulation and assessment by laying out a typology of active-learning activities that isolates and examines their potential for assessment. In short, we argue that there are essentially…
Descriptors: Simulation, Student Evaluation, Political Science, Active Learning
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Wakelee, Daniel; Itkonen, Tiina – Journal of Political Science Education, 2013
Engaging students with material associated with public budgeting processes can be a challenge. Our experience in an interdisciplinary seminar on education politics and policy suggests that a budget simulation exercise is an effective tool to achieve multiple objectives, including increased student engagement and strengthening student-learning…
Descriptors: Budgeting, Budgets, School Districts, Student Participation
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Glazier, Rebecca A. – Journal of Political Science Education, 2011
Despite the growing availability and popularity of simulations and other active teaching techniques, many instructors may be deterred from using simulations because of the potentially high costs involved. Instructors could spend a preponderance of their time and resources developing and executing simulations, but such an approach is not necessary.…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Political Science, Teaching Methods, Simulation