Abstract
The traditional process of educating undergraduates is often relegated to the passive lecturing format. One means of engaging students in active learning is through the use of simulations. Students were asked to take on the roles of United States senators and a Supreme Court nominee during a United States Supreme Court confirmation hearing simulation. Each student participated by researching a sitting senator and the nominee selected and engaged in a question-and-answer session as is done in the Senate Judiciary Committee. Students came away from this valuable experience by not only learning a great deal about the operation of the confirmation hearing as well as the substantive material learned but participating in a process that few people will ever actually experience. © American Political Science Association 2013.
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CITATION STYLE
Auerbach, A. H. (2013). United States supreme court confirmation simulation: Learning through the process of experience. PS - Political Science and Politics, 46(4), 808–812. https://doi.org/10.1017/S1049096513001066
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