
NEW!!!
Teachers Guide
Student Handbook

Active Citizenship Today

Louis P. Eatman,
President
Todd Clark, Executive Director
Marshall Croddy, Director of Program and
Materials
Development
Charles Degelman, Editor Susan Philips, Consultant
Andrew Costly, Production
Manager
©2005,
Service-Learning NETWORK
Constitutional Rights Foundation
601 S. Kingsley Dr.
Los Angeles, CA 90005
(213) 487-5590
Fax (213) 386-0459
crf@crf-usa.org
This issue of Service-Learning
NETWORK is made possible by a generous grant from The Ford
Foundation.
|
|
|
Four
Civic-Education Studies
Civic education lies at the
core of our nation’s
educational system. Today, many believe that it is in trouble and that
its decline has sobering implications for American democracy. Four
national civic-education studies present varying perspectives on this
single premise.
Civics
Report Card for the Nation, released by the National
Assessment
of Educational Progress (NAEP)
1998
This publication presents the results of a national NAEP civics
assessment, based on a sample of students who are statistically
representative of the entire nation. Performance is described in terms
of scores on a 0- to 300 scale and as percentages of students attaining
three separate achievement levels: Basic, Proficient, and Advanced. The
NAEP Civics Report Card revealed that:
- 25 percent of tested students demonstrated a
rudimentary understanding of how American democracy works.
- 9 percent of tested students were able to list two
or more positive effects of active citizenship.
In general, the NAEP results revealed that American
students learn facts about the American system of government but have
difficulty applying this knowledge to community problems or public
policy. For more information, visit the web site.
The
Civic Mission of Schools, released by Carnegie Corporation
of
New York and CIRCLE: The Center for Information and Research on Civic
Learning and Engagement 2003
Written and endorsed by more than 50 scholars and education
practitioners, the Civic Mission of Schools report summarizes
the
status of and need for civic learning in schools, kindergarten through
12th grade. The report finds that Americans under the age of 25:
- Are less likely to vote than either their older
counterparts or young people of past decades.
- Are not as interested in political discussion and
public issues as past generations were at the same point in their
lives.
- Have an incomplete understanding of fundamental
democratic principles and processes.
- Are not prepared to participate fully in our
democracy.
The report also analyzes trends in American political and
civic
engagement; identifies promising approaches to educating students for
democracy; and offers recommendations to educators, policymakers,
government officials and funders. For more information, visit the web
site.
Future
of the First Amendment: What America's High School Students Think
About
Their Freedoms, released by the John S. and James L. Knight
Foundation
2005
This new study suggests America’s high schools are failing to give
their students an appreciation of First Amendment guarantees of free
speech and a free press. Before making their report, researchers
questioned more than 100,000 high school students, nearly 8,000
teachers, and more than 500 administrators and principals. Among their
findings:
- Nearly three-fourths of high school students either
do not know how they feel about the First Amendment or admit they take
it for granted.
- Seventy-five percent erroneously think flag burning
is illegal.
- Half believe the government can censor the Internet.
- More than a third think the First Amendment goes too
far in the rights it guarantees.
- Most principals think their schools are doing a good
job of teaching the First Amendment.
For more information, visit the web site.
This study questions the current focus on core academic subjects at the
expense of preparing students to be engaged and effective citizens. The
report is the product of collaborative discussion among policymakers,
education practitioners, community groups, parents, and youth across
the nation. An Action Agenda puts forth seven propositions addressing
the following:
- Understanding the business of public education
- Knowledge, dispositions, virtues and skills of
responsible citizenship
- Civic knowledge as integral to a broadened “core of
learning” in schools
- Teaching methodologies such as service-learning as a
promising strategy
- Benefits of an integrated curriculum
- Necessary components of the action plan
- Community, parental and youth voice in the action
plan
The report offers a seven-step action plan to help schools
refocus on the goal of creating both academically proficient and
civically engaged students. The report also highlights several
programs, including school-community partnerships that promote both
quality academics and civic engagement. For more information, visit the
web site.
# # #
|