中东革命与抗议的综合学习与模拟

IF 0.2 Q3 AREA STUDIES
Brian Mello, Mark J. Stein
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引用次数: 3

摘要

摘要本文从我们教授本科生一套关于中东抗议和革命的历史与政治学配对课程的经验中探索了一些见解。学生们分组模拟课程中探索的革命或抗议的关键时刻。模拟作业旨在让学生参与积极的学习环境,并作为两门课程的共享作业。从教学角度来看,这个项目最有趣的结果是,它出乎意料地能够让学生接触到偶然性和情感,学术界最近强调这对理解社会运动至关重要,但这往往不属于对抗议和革命的历史和政治学分析的研究。在本文中,我们探讨了模拟作业,学生小组如何在教师的有限指导下设计模拟,学生如何通过深入了解事件的历史来承担指定的角色,以及参与模拟如何使构成我们课程阅读基础的分析复杂化。在我们的分析中,我们利用了配对课程的两次迭代,并使用了学生对课程的定性评估和学生对小组论文中包含的模拟的反思。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Integrative Learning and Simulating Revolution and Protest in the Middle East
Abstract This essay explores insights from our experiences teaching undergraduates a set of paired history and political science courses on protest and revolution in the Middle East. Working in groups, students developed simulations of key moments of revolution or protest explored during the courses. The simulation assignment was designed to engage students in an active learning setting and as a shared assignment across both courses. The most interesting result of this project, from the teaching perspective, was its unanticipated ability to expose students to the contingency and emotion that scholarship has recently emphasized as critical to understanding social movements, but which so often falls out of the study of history and political science analyses of protest and revolution. In this paper we explore the simulation assignment, how student groups designed the simulations with limited guidance from instructors, how students took on the assigned roles by engaging deeply with the histories of the events, and how the engagement in the simulations complicated the analyses that formed the bedrock of our course readings. In our analysis we draw on two iterations of the paired courses and use both student qualitative assessments of the course and student reflections on the simulations that were included in group papers.
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CiteScore
0.30
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