Teaching systems of government has never been my favourite subject to cover in the Social Studies curriculum. It tends to be a dry topic with very little student engagement. To try and make it more engaging and interesting for our students, a colleague and I came up with a game to introduce the idea of different systems of government.
Materials You'll Need:
Overview:
This game fits into many areas of the BC Grade 6 Curriculum. There are curricular connections for Social Studies, English Language Arts, Career Education, ADST, and Math.
To get the complete file with instructions, curricular connections, and government cards, click here.
We envisioned this as a beginning provocation to introduce different systems of government, but it could be used in the middle of a government unit, at the end for review, or as a jumping off point for any kind of student inquiry to systems of government or country studies. I hope you and your students have fun playing this game!
Materials You'll Need:
- 10 pieces of paper
- 10 glue sticks
- 10 pairs of scissors
- government cards, downloadable here
Overview:
- Students are arranged into 5 different groups. Each group represents a different country with a different system of government.
- The teacher will distribute a red government card to each group. Each card represents a different system of government. They are: anarchy, dictatorship, direct democracy, republic, and constitutional monarchy.
- Each group follows the rules on their card to make the longest paper chain possible with just one piece of paper.
- After each group has begun, there will be a coup in each country and the groups will be given a new blue government card with a new system of government. There is also a new objective - to make a chain with exactly 100 links.
- After the game, students can reflect on the government systems, how decisions were made, and which systems they would/would not like to live within.
This game fits into many areas of the BC Grade 6 Curriculum. There are curricular connections for Social Studies, English Language Arts, Career Education, ADST, and Math.
To get the complete file with instructions, curricular connections, and government cards, click here.
We envisioned this as a beginning provocation to introduce different systems of government, but it could be used in the middle of a government unit, at the end for review, or as a jumping off point for any kind of student inquiry to systems of government or country studies. I hope you and your students have fun playing this game!
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