Educational objectives | The students understand the values that implicitly guide political argument and debate and that some of these values support human rights, while others oppose them (teaching about human rights). The exercise trains students to be willing to study and understand values and attitudes regardless as to whether they agree with them or not (teaching through human rights). |
Resources | A list of propositions or slogans (see materials below). Alternatively election posters, video clips or excerpts from statements or speeches in political life could be used. |
Procedure
- The students form pairs or groups of four.
- They identify the implications of the statements. It may be necessary to provide them with questions to guide them and allow a comparison, e.g. for which groups in society a proposal may have implications and what these implications might be (the students would find answers such as the rieh and the poor, the healthy and the sick, the powerful and the weak, etc.).
- If they have already been introduced to basic approaches of political thought, the students could link the proposals to the different schools of thought. They may find affinities to more than one line of thinking.
- The students judge the statements and their underlying values in the light of human rights.
Extension
The students discuss the implications of the propositions by relating them to issues under discussion in their country.
Materials
List of propositions and Slogans
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