C Curriculum Explorer
Personal & Social Development·Empathy & Social Awareness·meta

Global Citizenship

Understand what it means to be a citizen in an interconnected world where decisions in one place affect people elsewhere; explore global issues (climate justice, forced migration, global health, poverty) through an empathy lens, distinguishing facts from value judgements; engage with the ethical tension between obligations to those close to us and obligations to distant strangers; introduce evidence-based giving and effective altruism as one framework for thinking about global responsibility; develop a personal, reasoned stance on global citizenship that acknowledges complexity

Suggested ages 13–14

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Evidence of understanding

No evidence statements are recorded.

Assessment prompt

When Global Citizenship reads about a crisis happening in another country, can they describe how they think about their own responsibility — and name one practical thing young people can genuinely do about large-scale problems rather than just feeling helpless?

Standards alignment

No external standards are linked to this topic.