2017
DOI: 10.1017/s1049096517001263
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Teaching across Cultures: Student-Led Modules in a Human Rights Course

Abstract: Human rights, ethnic conflict, democratization, colonialism, and developmentmany upper-level political science courses contain content that is understood differently across cultural contexts. Equipping students to appreciate diverse perspectives on these issues is a challenge that requires creative pedagogical strategies, regardless of whether all students come from the same region of the United States or the class has more than half international students. Professors in both environments have the complex task… Show more

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Cited by 4 publications
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“…Students can connect with human rights organizations for service learning and research (Allam et al 2021; Bell, Mattern, and Telin 2007; Marlin-Bennett 2002) or to raise funds for and awareness of human rights issues (Brunell 2013; DeLaet 2016). They can create consumption logs to analyze the human rights implications of their actions (Weir 2021); lead modules of the course (McBride 2017); or explore primary source materials to learn about human rights violations and movements—through either archival research (Elder and Wallace 2020) or oral histories (Low and Sonntag 2013). Alternatively, students can participate in simulations.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Students can connect with human rights organizations for service learning and research (Allam et al 2021; Bell, Mattern, and Telin 2007; Marlin-Bennett 2002) or to raise funds for and awareness of human rights issues (Brunell 2013; DeLaet 2016). They can create consumption logs to analyze the human rights implications of their actions (Weir 2021); lead modules of the course (McBride 2017); or explore primary source materials to learn about human rights violations and movements—through either archival research (Elder and Wallace 2020) or oral histories (Low and Sonntag 2013). Alternatively, students can participate in simulations.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%