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Gamified "Who Is Winning the Cold War?"

Scott Gross
Scott Gross 1 month ago

I love "Who is Winning the Cold War," but in the past, it has taken my students far longer to do the research and they often don't have enough of a schema to separate good sources from bad or to properly evaluate what should be considered a "win" or "loss." Inspired by the It's About Time game developed by the Bill of Rights institute, I turned the events into cards with little blurbs. I just intro'd it with my tenth graders and it went really well.

The Pro's:

  • Shortened the activity from four class periods to one and a half.
  • Really high student engagement, even the ones who are typically checked out.
  • High quality discussion between students around events.
  • Lots of opportunities to interact with students, challenge their thinking, or correct misconceptions.
  • Fun.

The Con's:

  • Eliminating the research portion reduces opportunities for disagreements/discussions.
  • Shortened descriptions reflect my biases (although I have done my best to minimize them).
  • Accessibility issues for visually impaired students, students with certain learning disabilities, and English language learners.
  • Difficult to adapt and differentiate the game portion.
  • Easy for disengaged students to go unnoticed.

I'm including a zip file of my materials, with four pictures removed because I didn't have the rights to distribute them. I have included an editable publisher version of the cards, an easy-to-print pdf, and my class slides.

Who is Winning the Cold War Card Game

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  • Heidi Pasternak
    Heidi Pasternak 1 month ago

    Scott - I LOVE this.  Where in the process of CW did you find this most successful?  Is it a good first activity? My 11th grade on-level class have already taken US.... not that they arll remember it all! :-)  Trying to plan my self out..... Thans!

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  • Scott Gross
    Scott Gross 1 month ago in reply to Heidi Pasternak

    I put it in the same sequence as OER recommends, at the end of the Cold War, because it really requires students to already understand concepts like proxy war, competition for social influence, and the role of the US and USSR in the processes of decolonization. It ended up being a great wrap-up activity that led smoothly into the End of Empire lesson.

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  • Scott Gross
    Scott Gross 1 month ago in reply to Heidi Pasternak

    I put it in the same sequence as OER recommends, at the end of the Cold War, because it really requires students to already understand concepts like proxy war, competition for social influence, and the role of the US and USSR in the processes of decolonization. It ended up being a great wrap-up activity that led smoothly into the End of Empire lesson.

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