Teaching Ethics

Volume 21, Issue 1, Spring 2021

Beth Dixon, Allie Boudreau, Austin Burke, Aaryn Clark, Sarah-Margaret Cowart, Sarah Martin
Pages 77-92

Playing the Poverty Simulation Game: A Course in Analysis and Revision

In the spring 2020 semester six students enrolled in a topics course in the philosophy department at my institution titled, “The Poverty Game.” We created this article by collaboration based on fourteen weeks of writing assignments and class discussions. All of us participated in an on-campus poverty simulation “game” sponsored by the Teacher Resource Center. Our objectives in the course were to critically analyze the game by asking questions and challenging assumptions about goals, rules, narrative profiles, and solutions to poverty that were implied by the simulation. We then set about to revise the game. Our suggested revisions highlighted structural conditions as part of an explanation about why populations and subgroups are poor. Identifying these inequities positioned us to recommend justice solutions to poverty and, further, to empower players of the simulation to become agents of change.