Poverty Simulation: An Experiential Learning Tool Emphasizing Economic Justice Content
Document Type
Article
Publication Date
2012
Abstract
The social work profession has been criticized for abandoning its mission to serving the poor and challenging economic injustice. The authors’ evaluation study examines the effectiveness of a poverty simulation experience in an undergraduate policy class to counter the trend that diverges from the profession’s original mission. The poverty simulation was designed to emphasize the structural contributions of poverty, dispel myths about people who live in poverty, and encourage students to remain committed to challenging social and economic injustice. Data demonstrate that the poverty simulation experience increased students’ knowledge of the challenges of living in poverty.
Recommended Citation
Zosky, Diane L. and Thompson, James, "Poverty Simulation: An Experiential Learning Tool Emphasizing Economic Justice Content" (2012). Faculty Publications - Social Work. 8.
https://ir.library.illinoisstate.edu/fpswk/8
Comments
This article was originally published as Zosky, D. & Thompson, J. (2012). Poverty Simulation: An Experiential Learning Tool Emphasizing Economic Justice Content. The Journal of Baccalaureate Social Work, 17 (1), 69-84.