Teaching Controversy - How can we prepare our kids to participate in ... politics?
http://onwisconsin.uwalumni.com/uncategorized/teaching-controversy/
How can we prepare our kids to participate in the highly polarized world of politics?
In the volatile months leading up to Wisconsin Governor Scott Walker winning a recall election in June 2012, principals in some schools in the state told teachers that they couldnt discuss the historic event in their classrooms. At the same time, kids reported that their parents were getting into arguments at the grocery store and refusing to talk to family members due to disagreements about Walkers decision to curb the power of state-employee labor unions. What was happening outside the classroom was exactly why teachers should have been permitted to talk about the issues and competing views in school, says Diana Hess, a professor of curriculum and instruction in the UWs School of Education. Hess, a former high school teacher, has done long-term research in three states, including Wisconsin, on how middle school and high school teachers engage students in lively and respectful discussions about tough issues.
Civic education without controversial issues is like a symphony without sound, Hess wrote in her 2009 book, Controversy in the Classroom: The Democratic Power of Discussion, which cemented her reputation as a national expert on the subject. Hess says the key argument for civic education is patriotic: the role of schools has long been to prepare people to participate in democracy (see Jeffersons letter to Madison, quoted below). The challenge is that we need to prepare kids to participate in a highly partisan, polarized world, and yet, we need to do it in a nonpartisan way, she says. I call this the paradox of political education. And its really challenging.
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A telling example comes from Adlai E. Stevenson High School, north of Chicago, one of twenty-two schools in Illinois that the McCormick Foundation has recognized as Democracy Schools for their commitment to civic learning. Students there got together to advocate for Suffrage at 17, state legislation that would allow seventeen-year-olds to register and vote in primary elections.
McCormicks other Democracy Schools got involved, submitting electronic witness statements and testimony from around the state, and Stevenson students went to the state capitol in Springfield to lobby their legislators in person. The bill was passed into law and took effect at the beginning of this year. Students in Democracy Schools spearheaded a massive voter-registration drive, with more than nine thousand students in the Chicago area alone registering to vote in the spring primary election. To me, thats a huge success story, and its what good civics looks like, Healy says. Theyll be lifelong participants in this process.
Emphasis mine.