A quiz designed to help students understand their own political views. This quiz has four sections - social, cultural, political and economic. There is a guide to scoring answers at the back of the quiz, and a separate guide to interpreting the scores.
An example of scoring once points for each section are tallied -
Economic Issues: 18 points → Far Left
Social Issues: 14 points → Moderate Libertarian
Political Issues: 10 points → Centrist
Cultural Issues: 7 points → Traditional
All scoring is explained in the second attached document.
*These questions are designed to cover a broad range of topics, providing an initial understanding of different political beliefs and values. The answers can help students to reflect on where they stand on the political spectrum/compass.
To determine an overall political position, you can have students plot their results on a political compass grid (numeracy):
X-Axis (Economic): Left (-) to Right (+)
Y-Axis (Social): Libertarian (-) to Authoritarian (+)
For more nuanced results, you could consider averaging the scores across sections or using a weighted approach if certain issues are more important.
It is important to remind students that political beliefs can be complex.
This lesson gives an overview of Trump’s victory in the 2024 Presidential Election, takes a brief look at his foreign policy, and includes a global impacts simulation group activity.
PDF version of a presentation I made on Canva, a comprehension made on Diffit included, and teacher notes included.
I encourage students to share their knowledge on Trump, the US elections, and his stance on foreign policy throughout the lesson.
I use the presentation to introduce Trump’s victory. I then use the map to explain how he stormed to victory as well as how the electoral college vote works.
After, I introduce the term ‘foreign policy’ - explaining what it is and introducing three main aspects of Trump’s foreign policy.
Following on from that, to introduce the group activity, I ask the students to share their thoughts and opinions on how Trump’s foreign policy might impact global relations and events. I give a brief overview of the potential impacts of his policy on the EU, Ukraine, and Palestine (teacher notes attached if required).
To facilitate the global impact simulation, divide the class into 5 groups and assign one country or region (the EU) to each group. Every group will need a show-me board, whiteboard marker, and sponge to wipe. Allow them 10-15 minutes to analyse the potential impacts of Trump’s foreign policy on their assigned region. Each group must then present their work to the class.
The lesson can be concluded with a walking debate or general discussion, using the debate prompts at the end of the comprehension or points that have come up during the lesson.