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Apply impact calculus skills to structural impacts.
Analyze how impacts interact with each other to make “turn” arguments.
~25-35 min. (depends on squad size)
Paper (3 sheets per student)
Pens (1-2 colors per student)
Create a list of structural/kritikal impacts for students to debate.
Sample impacts/kritiks: modern capitalism/neoliberalism; pre-emptively and dramatically reacting to potential/perceived threats (securitization); centering human life as most important (anthropocentrism); antiblackness/white supremacy; misogyny/patriarchy; defining certain ways that human bodies should be/can be natural, wrong, or needing to be altered (biopower).
Students do not discuss impact interactions.
Students struggle to see the weight of impacts without focusing on a specific event.
Students can make “turn” arguments.
Students can give structural explanations of concrete impacts/events.
If students seem confused during the mini-lecture, consider giving half of the squad more concrete impacts and pairing them with structural impacts.
If time, consider having students who do not advance in the main bracket debate each other to compete for third place.