Saturday, July 5, 2025

What About A Civics Education Moonshot?

Colleen Shogan and John Bridgeland are in The Hill arguing for a K-16 civics education "moonshot," and I'm pretty sure we need that like we need more comfortable seats on a sinking ship-- it's not a terrible idea, but it doesn't address the real problem.

Shogan and Bridgeland point with alarm to the terrible results on civics testing for everyone between birth and death in this country. These two are with More Perfect, a bi-partisanish group that wants Americans to play together better, and I'm pretty sure that they are well aware that tests of civic knowledge are not the biggest signs around that civics knowledge is in a bit of a slump these days.

But their prescription is back-to-basics education about the Declaration, the Constitution, the Bill of Rights, separation of powers-- all that good stuff. Plus 

Schools must teach about the virtues of pluralism, productive disagreement and critical thinking. We are teaching a generation to code; we should also teach them to decode news and information. What’s more, civics education should not begin and end with one course — it should also provide inspiring inquiries across the curriculum, kindergarten through college, to link learning with practical civic applications.

Plus history, "despite loud voices claiming the discipline has fallen victim to political indoctrination and ideological excess." Plus debate and consensus. With discussions including "scope of various levels of government, the merits of the social safety net, the roles of civil society and individuals in addressing key challenges, the disparate impacts on different populations and America’s place in the world."

Sigh.

First, my reaction is that A) some of this is already well covered by many schools and that B) what do you want to cut out of the curriculum to make room for more civics? Cause if there's anything teachers love, it's when they're in the middle of juggle fifteen balls, some thought leader sidles up to say, "We'd like you to add a couple more balls here. I know you're busy, but, gosh, this is really important. Thanks."

Second, is this really a school problem?

I mean, sure-- students should be taught the basics of how government is designed to work in this country. However, I'll bet you that schools are already doing this, already. 

The problem is not that schools are failing to teach civics. The problem is that schools could run the tap wide open with civics education 6 hours a day, 180 days a year, and it would still not be enough to counteract the firehose of civics misinformation, lies and bullshit being pumped into American society.

We've got christianist nationalism, complete with piles of ahistorical books establishing a fictional history as truth. We have multiple elected officials, plus an entire regime on a second term devoted to installing an authoritarian monarchy. We've got entire media structures devoted to spreading bullshit and lies about how the country is or should be working. Oh, and some of that stuff about history and pluralism is illegal to teach in some states.

Yeah, we've got a MAGA administration and Fox News, but sire, the civics problem in this country is because Mrs. Fleenswoggle didn't spend enough time on separation of powers with her fifth grade class last week.

Americans' problem is not that they weren't taught about our government in school. It's that there are a whole lot of folks investing time and money and energy into selling citizens of all ages an alternative history of the United States. If you expect a bunch of high school civics teachers to somehow counteract that, you should probably take your copy of the Declaration and use it to roll up some of your preferred legal-in-some-states recreational drug.

We have always had civics challenges in this country. Since Day One, lots of folks here don't believe in democracy because they don't believe in equality. Our founders didn't agree on anything, and so our origin is loaded with contradictions and tensions. We have history stuffed with moments in which politicians worked hard to get their own way in spite of the rules rather than by following them. There isn't a single line in the Constitution that someone hasn't tried to get around. It is the most American thing in the world to deliberately try to ignore, forget, or rewrite what you know about civics. 

But sure--let's lay fixing all that on the education system. 

Educating children about the way the government is supposed to work is necessary and important work. But if your real goal is to get a nation where more people know, comprehend, and embrace our national civic life, you're going to need a much bigger and better plan than turning to school teachers and saying, "Hey, teach that stuff harder, will you."

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