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TV Debate 1 Contrast 2010 with the 2015 proposals Why are they different?

2015 Election - teaching ideas

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Page 1: 2015 Election - teaching ideas

TV Debate 1

• Contrast 2010 with the 2015 proposals• Why are they different?

Page 2: 2015 Election - teaching ideas

TV Debate 2

• Recreate your own TV debate in your class• Students research different parties, their policies,

manifestos & election pledges in advance• Could use as a hustings as part of a mock election

Page 3: 2015 Election - teaching ideas

London Leaning

• Students investigate…• Why do voting patterns look like this in London?

Page 4: 2015 Election - teaching ideas

Prime Minister’s Questions

• Like a hot seat• Class creates questions for the ‘PM’ – about policies and track record of

the coalition etc• Rotate the PM• Set up the class like the House of Commons• Have specific roles which mirror Parliament – e.g. leader of the

opposition, deputy PM, shadow cabinet etc

Page 5: 2015 Election - teaching ideas

Predict the Papers

• Examine the media’s role in the election

• Can the Sun say ‘it won it’ ever again?

• Examine evidence which shows the power of the media, e.g. – Readership– Usage patterns– Influence of ‘new’ media, youtube

etc– Political leanings

Page 6: 2015 Election - teaching ideas

Back to the Future

• Students go back in time to contrast Britain now with Britain in 2010

• Students could be given different areas to examine which mirror government departments: education, health, economy, home office, culture/media/sport, defence, foreign affairs

Page 7: 2015 Election - teaching ideas

Race to the Seat

• As individuals, in pairs or in groups, students pick/are allocated a prospective parliamentary candidate for their constituency

• They plan a campaign to get them elected, including:– Media messages to give out (positive, reactive or negative?)– How much they will spend on flyers, posters, door-knocking, a website and

online presence– How they will use volunteers– Which hustings invitations they will attend (etc)

• Students have an imaginary budget to run the campaign. This presents them with various ‘opportunity cost’ choices they must make.

• Students could send their campaign ideas to the actual PPCs!

Page 8: 2015 Election - teaching ideas

WHY OH WHY?

• Students investigate why the election happens in the way it does. E.g. – Why first past the post, not proportional representation?– Why do we vote for an MP, not a prime minister or president?– Why do we have an election on one day?– Why do we have to vote in person or by post, not online?– Why do we have self-funded & not state-funded parties?– Why do we have a general election every 5 years, not more often?

Page 9: 2015 Election - teaching ideas

Can’t Vote 2015

• Students investigate why 16 or 17 year olds are not allowed to vote in the general election in May

Page 10: 2015 Election - teaching ideas

Won’t Vote 2015

• Students investigate whether people should bother voting in the May general election.

• Students research for and against arguments• Finish with a question-time style panel with

panellists arguing for and against voting

Page 11: 2015 Election - teaching ideas

Every vote counts?

• Students examine whether every vote will count in the May 2015 general election.

• The investigation will touch on… electoral systems (FPP vs PR vs AV etc), ‘safe’ seats, target seats, party funding…

Page 12: 2015 Election - teaching ideas

Mock election

• Conduct a mock election with students standing as if they each represented given political parties

• Conduct radio phone-ins to test their Q&A abilities (other students can text in questions or call in)

• Hold a hustings• Hold a real vote, with the rest of the class/year/school

involved• How could you build active Citizenship into it?

Page 13: 2015 Election - teaching ideas

Political Party Project

• Students create their own parties focused on improving the school• First students learn how actual political parties work and campaign• In their parties students divide up responsibilities as a party would

– e.g. for education (quality of lessons, behaviour etc), health (school meals, related policies), defence (school security), immigration (admissions)

• Students create manifestos & campaigns• Can be run as a whole year group event – each party is presented

to each class, winning parties from each class go forward to a year group assembly and election

• Could have a different year group voting• Winning party could get to present policies to SLT / School Council

Page 14: 2015 Election - teaching ideas

Community Question Time

• Students work with you to organise a community question time during the election campaign

• All the PPCs for the school’s constituency are invited• Parents/carers, teachers and students are invited • Students research candidates and party

policies/manifestos and prepare questions to ask on the night