Impact of Globalisation on Daily LifeActivities & Teaching Strategies
Active learning helps students grasp the tangible effects of globalisation in their own lives. When they audit products they use daily or debate trends they experience, they move from abstract ideas to concrete evidence of economic and cultural interconnections.
Learning Objectives
- 1Analyze the origins and global supply chains of at least three consumer products found in a typical Singaporean household.
- 2Evaluate the influence of global trends in food and fashion on local consumption patterns in Singapore.
- 3Explain how digital technologies, such as social media and e-commerce, accelerate the diffusion of global cultural products and ideas into Singapore.
- 4Critique the economic and social implications of the new international division of labour for workers in manufacturing countries and consumers in Singapore.
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Product Audit: Backpack Inventory
Students empty backpacks and list 10 items, then research origins using labels and online tools. In pairs, they categorize by country and discuss one cultural or economic impact per item. Groups share findings on a class map.
Prepare & details
Identify products in your daily life that come from other countries.
Facilitation Tip: During the Product Audit, circulate to prompt students to ask 'Where was this designed?' before checking labels, to shift focus from obvious origins to layered global connections.
Setup: Two teams facing each other, audience seating for the rest
Materials: Debate proposition card, Research brief for each side, Judging rubric for audience, Timer
Trend Debate: Global Fashion Forum
Assign small groups one trend, such as fast fashion or K-beauty. They prepare pros (affordability, variety) and cons (exploitation, waste), then debate in a structured rotation. Conclude with votes on sustainable alternatives.
Prepare & details
Discuss how global trends in food, fashion, or entertainment reach Singapore.
Facilitation Tip: In the Trend Debate, assign roles like 'consumer advocate' or 'global retailer' to push students to argue from different perspectives, ensuring balanced discussions.
Setup: Two teams facing each other, audience seating for the rest
Materials: Debate proposition card, Research brief for each side, Judging rubric for audience, Timer
Supply Chain Mapping: Chocolate Journey
Whole class traces a chocolate bar from cocoa farms in Ivory Coast to Singapore shelves. Use string on a world map to connect stages, noting technology roles like GPS tracking. Discuss vulnerabilities at each step.
Prepare & details
Explain how technology facilitates global connections.
Facilitation Tip: For the Supply Chain Mapping, provide large chart paper and coloured markers so groups can visually track each step, making abstract processes concrete.
Setup: Two teams facing each other, audience seating for the rest
Materials: Debate proposition card, Research brief for each side, Judging rubric for audience, Timer
Tech Simulation: Global Marketplace Role-Play
Individuals role-play roles in a supply chain (farmer, shipper, retailer). Pairs negotiate via simulated apps, facing disruptions like delays. Debrief on how internet and logistics enable connections.
Prepare & details
Identify products in your daily life that come from other countries.
Facilitation Tip: For the Tech Simulation, assign roles with specific constraints (e.g., 'Your shipment must arrive within 5 days') to simulate real-world pressures and delays.
Setup: Two teams facing each other, audience seating for the rest
Materials: Debate proposition card, Research brief for each side, Judging rubric for audience, Timer
Teaching This Topic
Teachers should balance factual tracing with critical reflection to avoid oversimplifying globalisation as purely positive or negative. Research shows students retain concepts better when they connect them to personal experiences, so begin with items they use daily. Avoid treating globalisation as a distant process; instead, frame it through Singapore’s role as a hub in trade, technology, and cultural exchange.
What to Expect
Students should demonstrate an ability to trace the global origins of everyday items and explain how globalisation shapes their routines. Successful learning includes identifying interdependence, analysing supply chains, and discussing cultural exchanges with specific examples.
These activities are a starting point. A full mission is the experience.
- Complete facilitation script with teacher dialogue
- Printable student materials, ready for class
- Differentiation strategies for every learner
Watch Out for These Misconceptions
Common MisconceptionDuring the Product Audit, students may assume cultural effects are separate from economic trade.
What to Teach Instead
Use the audit’s checklist to ask, 'How might this item’s design reflect global cultural influences?' and have students research the designer’s nationality or the country where it became popular.
Common MisconceptionDuring the Supply Chain Mapping, students might think Singapore produces most of its goods locally.
What to Teach Instead
After mapping, point to Singapore’s ports on the map and ask, 'If we import these items, where do they enter our country?' to highlight reliance on imports.
Common MisconceptionDuring the Tech Simulation, students may underestimate technology’s role in globalisation.
What to Teach Instead
Pause the simulation to ask groups, 'What technology did you rely on to communicate with suppliers?' and have them list apps or platforms used during the role-play.
Assessment Ideas
After the Product Audit, collect backpack inventory sheets and review three items per student. Identify common origins and surprising countries to discuss patterns as a class.
During the Trend Debate, listen for students to reference specific global food chains or fashion retailers in their arguments about how global trends reach Singaporeans.
After the Tech Simulation, students write a paragraph explaining how a specific technology (e.g., GPS tracking, social media ads) enabled a global trend to spread in Singapore, using terms from the role-play.
Extensions & Scaffolding
- Challenge students to find a product with the most complex global journey and present its supply chain to the class.
- Scaffolding for struggling groups: Provide a partially completed supply chain map for the Chocolate Journey activity with 3-4 countries pre-filled.
- Deeper exploration: Invite a local business owner or logistics worker to share how global supply chains impact their daily operations.
Key Vocabulary
| Globalisation | The process by which businesses or other organizations develop international influence or start operating on an international scale, leading to increased interconnectedness of economies and cultures. |
| Supply Chain | The sequence of processes involved in the production and distribution of a commodity, from the raw material stage to the final consumer, often spanning multiple countries. |
| Transnational Corporation (TNC) | A company that operates in more than one country, often relocating production to countries with lower labour costs or favourable regulations. |
| Cultural Diffusion | The spread of cultural beliefs, social activities, and popular trends from one group or society to another, often facilitated by media and technology. |
| New International Division of Labour (NIDL) | The spatial redistribution of the production process, where different stages of production are carried out in different countries, typically with higher-skilled tasks in developed nations and lower-skilled assembly in developing nations. |
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