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Poverty exercise inspires other role-playing ideas

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  • Poverty exercise inspires other role-playing ideas

    Bloomington Pantagraph, USA
    Aug 4, 2006

    Poverty exercise inspires other role-playing ideas

    Pantagraph Editorial

    Like so-called reality TV programs that "simulate" being stranded on
    an island or being thrown into a house full of strangers with "Big
    Brother" watching, the poverty simulation exercises conducted by the
    University of Illinois Extension and the McLean County Diversity
    Project barely give people a taste of what real poverty is like.

    It is one thing to run out of "money" in what amounts to a game. It
    is another thing to go to bed hungry or wonder how to replace the
    shoes your child has outgrown.

    But if the simulations can change perspectives and increase
    understanding, they are worth the effort.

    And that appears to be the case with participants in the simulation
    that took place recently at The Salvation Army Corps and Community
    Center in Bloomington.

    Even participants who have worked with people in poverty had their
    eyes opened to circumstances they hadn't considered, such as failing
    to get a receipt to prove rent was paid or spending time dealing with
    paperwork and bureaucracy.

    In fact, the simulation seems to have done such a good job of
    increasing awareness for participants, we would like to suggest other
    simulations or role-playing activities

    -- Gov. Rod Blagojevich should play the role of a nursing home
    administrator or pharmacy owner trying to pay employees, rent,
    utility bills and other expenses while waiting months for the state
    to reimburse him for Medicaid cases.

    -- Lawmakers should play the roles of teachers trying to teach
    students the basics of reading, writing and arithmetic while also
    finding time to teach state-mandated material on genocide in Armenia
    and the Ukraine, "the vestiges of slavery in the country" and healthy
    eating.

    Bonus points will be awarded if they figure out how to teach these
    topics while also taking time off for such holidays as Casimir
    Pulaski Day.

    -- Supreme and appellate court justices should play the role of just
    about anyone trying to make sense of and live within the boundaries
    of their sometimes conflicting rulings.

    Would such role-playing change their habits? Probably not.

    But, like the poverty simulation exercises, it might give them a
    greater understanding of what others go through and maybe -- just
    maybe -- it could inspire them to make the things better for those
    affected by their actions or, at least, not do anything that makes
    the situation worse.
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