For the optimistic among us, such attitudes may offer a glimmer of hope for charting a future in which Americans can once again discuss and debate issues without overheating. But 51ÊÓÆ”-Dearborn Ed.D. student Karen Caldwell says the seeming consensus that civics education is important doesnât equate to agreement about what should be taught in the classroom. As part of her dissertation research, Caldwell, a former social studies teacher who now serves as an education coach for low-performing schools in Wayne County, is digging into all kinds of challenges teachers face in effectively teaching civics. Without question, they are many. Outside of any politics, one of the fundamental hurdles teachers face is the number of hours devoted to civics in the typical school calendar, says Caldwell. In Michigan, for example, civics in elementary school consists of eight to nine weeks of 4th-grade instruction in which the main goal is to introduce kids to the basic structure of government. The next bite at the apple doesnât come until 8th grade, when social studies classrooms are required to cover things like the Constitution. It isnât until high school that curriculum requirements finally give social studies teachers a devoted chunk of time. But Caldwell says itâs still a huge challenge to âgive someone whoâs 16 all of the skills, knowledge and dispositions to be a good citizenâ in the 80 or so classroom hours allotted for the subject. âItâs simply not enough time.â
What teachers and students are doing with those hours is increasingly becoming the subject of hot public debate too. Recent examples, like the controversy over , showcase this intensity, but Caldwell says teachers often face more nuanced challenges on the day to day.
âThe core challenge is that kids are most engaged with the things that resonate with their lived experience, but those are the things that will get you in trouble as a teacher,â Caldwell explains. âFor example, letâs say youâre teaching the First Amendment and free speech. If you stick with a historical example, like , which is 50 years old and well-settled law, youâll be OK. If, however, you pick a case thatâs floating around in the news and way closer to the studentsâ lives â like a student who â then youâre asking for a call from a parent or a trip to your principalâs office. The administrationâs view is usually that you could have taught the concept without the controversy.â
Caldwell says this tension has a major impact on subject selection by teachers, whose desire to give their students material that speaks to them is at odds with their own personal desires to avoid blowback from parents or actual discipline. This leaves educators looking for inventive ways to avoid this catch 22. For example, in Caldwellâs own classrooms, she often used an exercise involving a questionnaire that asked students their views on 15 current issues to give them a sense of where they fell on the political spectrum. The often surprising results gave the students a chance to think through their own political identities â and gave Caldwell an entrypoint to do instruction on minor parties and the challenges of a two-party system. Similarly, when engaging the students in community-based work, she found projects that required learning about local zoning or veterans issues would avoid a call from the principal â even though she says topics like trangender students on athletic teams, or whether refusing to stand for the pledge of allegiance is protected speech, likely would have been better bets for engaging students.
Such compromises are simply a reality for social studies teachers these days, but Caldwell remains optimistic that a solid civics education is still attainable, even in uncivil times. In fact, another core skill she encourages teachers to teach is civility itself.
âIf youâre going to have conversations about controversial things, your first mission as a teacher is to create a safe space,â Caldwell says. âYou have to teach students that you may disagree with an idea and not the person. And you have to model that yourself, and correct gently when necessary, and bring the classroom back together as a community if things go sideways. One of the best things you can do is show the students that itâs OK to change your mind when you encounter new information, or admit you were wrong, or even apologize. Iâve done that in my own classroom, and thatâs so powerful for students to see because those are the acts that can really lower the temperature. That, more than anything, is what weâre missing today â and thatâs what this generation has a chance to get back.â
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Ed.D. candidate Karen Caldwell is continuing her dissertation research into K-12 civics education all throughout 2021 and 2022. If youâd like to connect with her about her work, you can reach her at [email protected]. Or, if youâre interested in learning more about the Ed.D. program at 51ÊÓÆ”-Dearborn, check out the main program page.