Bringing Australian foreign policy alive through teaching and assessment practice
© 2019, © 2019 Australian Institute of International Affairs. If we are to help students develop opinions and perspectives on world politics, and understand at the same time what it means to hold these opinions and perspectives in the Australian context, we need to bring the world to the classroom. Information overload has led to feelings of alienation among students, and the way we teach needs to instil in students a sense that they are stakeholders in Australian foreign policy, and help them develop strategies for incorporating the complex information environment into their learning. In this short piece I propose two forms of assessment that authentically place the focus on these learning outcomes.
History
Journal
Australian Journal of International AffairsVolume
73Pagination
513-518Location
London, Eng.ISSN
1035-7718eISSN
1465-332XLanguage
engPublication classification
C1 Refereed article in a scholarly journalIssue
6Publisher
Taylor & FrancisUsage metrics
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Keywords
Australiaforeign policyteachingassessmentlearning outcomes160601 Australian Government and Politics130205 Humanities and Social Sciences Curriculum and Pedagogy (excl Economics, Business and Management)130103 Higher EducationSchool of Humanities and Social Sciences930301 Assessment and Evaluation of Curriculum930399 Curriculum not elsewhere classified940399 International Relations not elsewhere classified4408 Political science
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