In simple terms
A friendly intro before the formal notes — no formulas yet.
Your Political Action Blueprint
The Engagement Activity is your chance to move from theory to practice by actively engaging with a political issue you care about. It involves planning your action, carrying it out, and then critically analysing the experience and what you learned.
Think of it like planning and hosting a charity fundraising event. First, you identify a cause you care about (the political issue). Then, you write a detailed plan: what's the event's goal, who will you invite, what will you do, and how will you raise money? (the proposal). You then host the event (the engagement). Afterwards, you reflect: Did you meet your fundraising goal? What went well? What would you do differently next time, and what did you learn about fundraising and your chosen cause? (the reflection).
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First, identify a specific, manageable political issue that has both local and global dimensions. This will be the focus of your entire project.
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Next, design your engagement by writing a detailed research proposal. This blueprint outlines your research question, justifies your chosen issue and methods, and considers ethical implications.
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Then, you carry out your planned engagement. This is the 'experiential learning' part where you gather primary information through interviews, surveys, or participation.
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Finally, you write a critical reflection. This connects your personal experiences during the engagement to the key concepts, theories, and content of the Global Politics course.
Explore the concept
Use the live diagram and synced steps — play it or tap a step card to walk through.
Full topic notes
Formal explanation with the rigour you need for the exam.
Stage 1: Choosing and Justifying Your Political Issue
Your first task is to select a political issue. The best issues are often found at the local level but have clear connections to global processes. For example, a local campaign against single-use plastics connects to global issues of environmental governance, sustainability, and corporate power. Your choice must be 'political' – meaning it involves debates about power, resources, and decision-making. It must also be feasible to engage with in a meaningful way.
Scope: Choose an issue that is narrow enough to be manageable. 'Climate change' is too broad; 'The implementation of my city's new bicycle lane policy' is better.
Relevance: The issue must clearly link to one or more of the core units of the Global Politics syllabus.
Access: You must have realistic access to people, events, or information related to the issue. Can you actually interview a local councillor or survey affected residents?
Justification: In your proposal, you must argue why the issue is politically significant. Use evidence and link to course concepts to support your claims.
Stage 2: Designing Your Engagement – The Proposal
Your proposal is the blueprint for your project. It demonstrates to the examiner that you have thought through the process logically, ethically, and with clear academic purpose. It is not just a plan; it is an argument for why your project is worthwhile and well-conceived. A strong proposal sets you up for a successful engagement and a high-scoring report.
Research Question: Should be focused, open-ended, and guide your engagement. E.g., 'To what extent has the local council's 'Host a Refugee' programme successfully integrated asylum seekers in our community?'
Methods of Engagement: Specify what you will do. Examples: conducting semi-structured interviews, distributing a questionnaire, attending and observing town hall meetings, volunteering for an NGO. You must justify why these methods are the best way to answer your research question.
Ethical Considerations: This is non-negotiable. You must identify potential risks (e.g., to participants' privacy) and explain the concrete steps you will take to mitigate them (e.g., using pseudonyms, obtaining written informed consent).
Stage 3: Writing the Critical Reflection
The reflection is the heart of the Engagement Activity report. It is where you move beyond simply describing your activities and begin to analyse them through the lens of global politics. Your goal is to synthesise your personal experiences, the primary information you gathered, and the academic concepts from the course. The key is to demonstrate what you have learned about the political issue and about global politics more broadly.
In your reflection, constantly ask yourself 'So what?'. You observed a council meeting – so what? What does that observation reveal about power dynamics, legitimacy, or the policy-making process? You interviewed an activist – so what? How does their perspective challenge or support theories of social movements or human rights? Every piece of evidence from your engagement must be used to build a larger analytical point connected to the course.
Worked examples
See the formulas applied — reveal one step at a time, like the exam.
A student is interested in the political issue of 'fast fashion' and its impact. Draft a focused research question and justify the choice of two distinct engagement methods for their proposal.
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Research Question: 'To what extent do the purchasing habits of young people (16-18) in my school reflect an awareness of the labour rights issues in the global garment industry?'
A student's engagement involved volunteering for a local food bank. In their reflection, they noted that many users were in full-time employment. How could they structure a paragraph to link this observation to a Global Politics concept?
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Paragraph Structure (Mark Scheme Style):
How it all connects
The big idea sits in the middle — tap a linked idea to explore the link.
Tap a linked idea to see how it connects back to the main topic — that connection is what examiners reward.
Glossary
Try to recall each definition before you reveal it.
Quick check
Answer in your head first — then tap to check. No pressure.
Revision flashcards
Flip the card. Test yourself before the exam.
Engagement Activity
An independent, student-led research project for HL students, involving experiential learning and a written report of 2,000 words. It is an internal assessment component.
Key takeaways
Review these before you close the topic — retrieval beats re-reading.
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Scope: Choose an issue that is narrow enough to be manageable. 'Climate change' is too broad; 'The implementation of my city's new bicycle lane policy' is better.
- ✓
Relevance: The issue must clearly link to one or more of the core units of the Global Politics syllabus.
- ✓
Access: You must have realistic access to people, events, or information related to the issue. Can you actually interview a local councillor or survey affected residents?
- ✓
Justification: In your proposal, you must argue why the issue is politically significant. Use evidence and link to course concepts to support your claims.
Practice — then mark it
The whole point: a real Cambridge question, marked mark-by-mark.
Test Your Understanding
Test Your Understanding
Extra simulations & links
PhET, GeoGebra and other curated tools — open in a new tab.
Frequently asked
Checkpoint
One marked question is worth ten re-reads — close the loop before you move on.
Reading it isn’t knowing it — prove it.
Before you move on: do Test Your Understanding on paper, snap a photo, and get examiner-style feedback on exactly where you win and lose marks.