Globalisation / Global Citzenship

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Globingo is often used as an icebreaker activity to encourage a new group to interact with each other by finding out more about each other and their links to the wider world. It is used to illustrate interdependence.

You will need a ‘bingo’ sheet that asks questions and each person in the group will need to answer.

Example questions: Find someone who….has lived in another country?....is learning or speaks more than one language?

Questions can be tailored to specific areas of interest. Example questions: Find someone who….. can name 3 countries in Africa? Can name 3 of the G8 countries?

There are a wide range of samples to choose from.

Discussion points:

Follow on activities that raise questions such as ‘how do you see your world?’ and unpack images of the Global South and values are very useful. Use photographs, postcards, brochures, leaflets, etc. to start to look at questioning stereotypes and exploring values and their impact on how and why we teach and learn about the wider world and our own global footprint. Use futures exercises to envisage the difference we can make.

Specific activities could explore setting specific learning outcomes and appropriate methodologies around specific issues such as Fair Trade, Climate Change and Human Rights.

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NGOs such as Oxfam and UNICEF have websites with further learning materials.

  1. Banana Globingo (PDF 83kb)
    Source: Working for Sustainability in the Banana Industry External Link
  2. Globingo (Word 22kb)
    Source: Fairtrade Mark Ireland External Link
  3. Globingo (Word 196kb)
    Source: Make Poverty History External Link
  4. Globingo
    Source: Education for Sustainable Development and Global Citizenship External Link
  5. Teaching about Distant Locality (Training Teachers)
    Source: OXFAM External Link
  6. Get Global
    Source: ActionAid External Link

Reading material:

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