Political ScienceAll Genders Course;
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We are part of many different communities that shape who we are and what we believe. This course provides students with opportunities to better understand how our society and political system shape their various identities. By exploring aspects of our identities and lived experiences, we evaluate how the concept of citizenship and the individual citizen work together to create the communities we inhabit. From the launching point of the knowledge, values, and feelings we bring into the class, we uncover our own biases, explore the difference between fact and opinion, practice empathy, and learn to voice our own perspectives without silencing the perspectives of others. The course specifically builds students' ability to engage in conversations with people who may have views different than their own. We investigate how power structures in our society, ranging from government to the media, affect us. Students who take this course will leave with an understanding of our political system, society, and the structural frameworks that shape our identities, while simultaneously developing increased empathy and global awareness.
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“I really enjoyed the topics that we are touched upon. I think they are very interesting, and I love learning more about different cultures, especially those misrepresented by the media. Additionally, the topics we have discussed allowed me to discover new parts of myself and my own identity.” Course ApprovalThis course is approved by the NCAA. One Schoolhouse is fully accredited with the Middle States Association of Colleges and Schools and the Western Association of Schools and Colleges through December 1, 2025; we are an approved online publisher for the University of California. |
Teachers at One SchoolhouseTeachers at One Schoolhouse are passionate about helping students flourish and thrive.
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What Happens In The Second Semester?
Students wishing to pursue a political science project may enroll in the course for the full year. For students continuing into Semester II, the course shifts into personalized, project-based work, where students engage in deep, sustained inquiry, authentic and iterative research, critical analysis, and rigorous reflection, revision, and assessment as they journey through a self-designed, long-term activism, design, or research project on the topic of their choosing. Guided by a One Schoolhouse teacher, students pursue individual study/self-assessment or collaborative seminar/peer-review. Pathway options from which students choose include:
- Spring Activism Seminar: In this seminar, students identify a need and create a plan to effect economic, environmental, political, or social change in a target community. Utilizing a social science approach to research and evaluation, students are guided through the process of planning the deployment of a novel idea and identifying markers of success. Students may create a strategic plan for a club or non-profit or design an artistic product in this seminar.
- Spring Design Seminar: In this seminar, students design a technological solution to a real-world problem. Through the engineering design process/scientific method, students gather and analyze data to determine the effectiveness of their model or the accuracy of their hypothesis. Students may prototype and produce a public product in this seminar.
- Spring Research Seminar: In this seminar, students answer a theoretical or ethical question. Utilizing the social science/humanities tools for source evaluation, students collect, critique, and evaluate artifacts or primary source documents to explore their thesis. Students may create a written or multimedia product in this seminar.
Explore Other Student Courses:
Black Identity in the United States |
Asian American Identity in the United States |
Latina/o/x Identity in the United States |