Published online by Cambridge University Press: 02 March 2022
This essay explores insights from our experiences teaching undergraduates a set of paired history and political science courses on protest and revolution in the Middle East. Working in groups, students developed simulations of key moments of revolution or protest explored during the courses. The simulation assignment was designed to engage students in an active learning setting and as a shared assignment across both courses. The most interesting result of this project, from the teaching perspective, was its unanticipated ability to expose students to the contingency and emotion that scholarship has recently emphasized as critical to understanding social movements, but which so often falls out of the study of history and political science analyses of protest and revolution. In this paper we explore the simulation assignment, how student groups designed the simulations with limited guidance from instructors, how students took on the assigned roles by engaging deeply with the histories of the events, and how the engagement in the simulations complicated the analyses that formed the bedrock of our course readings. In our analysis we draw on two iterations of the paired courses and use both student qualitative assessments of the course and student reflections on the simulations that were included in group papers.
1 We were in the process of offering a third version of this when Covid-19 forced Muhlenberg to switch from in-person to on-line instruction in the spring of 2020. This disruption changed the nature of the course and forced us to modify the shared assignment away from the simulation project described here.
2 This idea of authority draws on Hanstedt, Paul's Creating Wicked Students: Designing Courses for a Complex World, (Sterling, VA: Stylus Publishing, 2018)Google Scholar.
3 Hanstedt, 6.