This lesson contains 39 slides, with text slides and 4 videos.
Lesson duration is: 60 min
Items in this lesson
Term 3: the Game of Politics
v4e
Team 1: Tessa, Bouwe and Justin
Team 2: Birgit, Lorna and Julian
Team 3: Sanne, Anne and Evy
Team 4: Louise, Rani, Wessel and Romy
Team 5: Rick, Puck, Giel and Noelle
Slide 1 - Slide
Term 3: the game of politics
v4d
Team 1: Jalmar, Jennifer, Sem and Aimée
Team 2: Chiara, Rutger, Jelmer and Kirsten
Team 3: Sanne, Emily, Carolina and Michiel
Team 4: Tom, Louise, Ivo
Team 5: Jelle, Mats, Marit
Team 6: Chris, Kim, Thomas and Tim
Slide 2 - Slide
Come up with a creative team name (50 euros)
timer
1:00
Slide 3 - Slide
Come up with as many questions as possible about politics (200 euros)
timer
5:00
Slide 4 - Slide
Lesson objectives
You can distinguish democratic practices from authoritarian practices in a given political system
You can compare democratic systems based on how they solve the effectiveness versus participation dilemma
Slide 5 - Slide
Has the world become
more or less democratic during the past decade? (50 euros)
timer
0:30
Slide 6 - Slide
Slide 7 - Video
Democracy: the end of history?
Slide 8 - Slide
Slide 9 - Video
Case study:
Illiberal democracy in Hungary (200 euros)
Go to https://goo.gl/8LrMeH
Determine and write down 3 authoritarian practices and 3 democratic practices present in Hungarian politics
timer
10:00
Slide 10 - Slide
https:
Slide 11 - Link
The democratic dilemma
System effectiveness versus citizen participation
Slide 12 - Slide
Choice 1
Direct democracy or representative democracy?
Slide 13 - Slide
Choice 2
Presidential or parliamentary system?
Slide 14 - Slide
Choice 3
Proportional representation or district system?
Slide 15 - Slide
What's the difference between the political system in the US and that of the Netherlands? (100 euros)
timer
1:30
Slide 16 - Slide
Proportional representation electoral system
Seats in parliament are divided among the parties in proportion to the amount of votes each party received.
Current system in the Netherlands
District electoral system
= majority system, country is divided into several districts and every district gets 1 seat in parliament --> ''Winner takes it all''
In US, UK, France, etc. AND the Netherlands until 1917
Slide 17 - Slide
The Netherlands should go back to having a district electoral system
Roles per team: 1 speaker, 1 devil's advocate, 1 time-keeper
First ten minutes: skim articles in silence
Next 10 minutes: discuss your arguments with your team.
!Use the participation versus efficiency dilemma in your argumentation!
Next 5 minutes: DEBATTLE! One minute per team, 'In favor' starts.
Rest of class + teacher = jury. Winning teams get 500 euros.
timer
15:00
Slide 18 - Slide
Lesson objectives
Can you distinguish democratic practices from authoritarian practices in a given political system?
Can you compare democratic systems based on how they solve the effectiveness versus participation dilemma?
Can you give two advantages and disadvantages of a district system compared to a proportional representation system?
Slide 19 - Slide
Today: political ideologies
Lesson objectives:
You can explain in your own words what the difference is between left-wing/socialist, right-wing/liberal, progressive, conservative, denominational, one-issue and populist parties and give examples of each.
You can explain which political party best represents your personal views.
Slide 20 - Slide
Name the 13 political parties that are represented in the Second Chamber (130 euros)
timer
3:00
Slide 21 - Slide
Which party represents your beliefs?
Do the test at partijenwijzer.nl
Slide 22 - Slide
https:
Slide 23 - Link
What's the difference between a left-wing and a right-wing ideology?
And between a progressive and conservative one?
(100 euros)
timer
1:00
Slide 24 - Slide
Slide 25 - Video
Left versus right: the socio-economic divide
Left: EQUALITY AND SOLITARITY! (main ideals behind socialism)
Active government (redistribution)
High taxes --> equal opportunities provided by the state
Right: FREEDOM! (main ideals behind liberalism)
Passive government (free market)
Low taxes --> personal responsibility and freedom
Slide 26 - Slide
Progressive versus conservative: the moral/ethical divide
Progressive: forward-looking, change and freedom regarding ethical issues is positive and needed
e.g. open towards gay marriage, ambitious climate regulations and abortion
Conservative: traditional values should be preserved, change is unwanted
e.g. sceptical towards EU, refugees and legalisation of drugs
Sometimes linked to religion: denominational parties based on Christian faith
Slide 27 - Slide
The political compass
Slide 28 - Slide
Single-issue parties
Slide 29 - Slide
Populism
More a style than an ideology (not left or right)
Claim to be the voice of the people against the elite
Often proposes simplistic solutions based on nationalism
Slide 30 - Slide
Lesson objectives
Can you explain in your own words what the difference is between left-wing/socialist, right-wing/liberal, progressive, conservative, denominational, one-issue and populist parties and give examples of each?
Can you explain which political party best represents your personal views?
Slide 31 - Slide
How will you divide the 1000 euros?
You cannot give everyone the same amount of money!
timer
10:00
Slide 32 - Slide
How are decisions taken in your family? In your friend group? In your sports club?
timer
2:00
Slide 33 - Slide
Representation versus representativeness
Representation = people who will act/speak for you in an official situation (e.g. elected members of parliament)
Representativeness = the degree to which those representatives accurately represent the opinions and interests of those they represent
Slide 34 - Slide
Name 3 reasons (€10 per reason) why the politicians in the second chamber are:
a good representation of the Dutch population (= high level of representativeness)
not a good representation of the Dutch population
timer
3:00
Slide 35 - Slide
Can you come up with another way citizens can choose their representatives (besides elections) (€50)
timer
1:00
Slide 36 - Slide
Slide 37 - Video
Majority rule versus deliberative (discussion-based) decision making
Come up with an example that shows how majority rule ('the tyranny of the majority') can be problematic for democracy. (€50)