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Out-Of-School Time Providers – Needed Partners In An Uncommon Civics Education

These days, it appears that every other day presents a lesson in civics – an opportunity to understand and practice the rights and duties of citizenship anew. More palpably, the state of our civic education is in flux. What civic participation looks and acts like is being updated for a new generation – with numerous examples from Black Lives Matter to the March for Our Lives, from the Women’s March to the Dreamers to children taking the case on climate change both to the courts and the streets. Movements like these suggest that a civics education has not only taken shape outside of the schoolhouse walls but is possible for all students when we think creatively and expansively what it means to prepare young people for engaged citizenship.

Yet, national surveys suggest that there is a disconnect between the abstract and, too often, an uninspiring approach that characterizes much of civics education in schools and the grounded induction into self-governance and collective action of the streets. This gap is not only confusing but ultimately, alienating for young people:

Most importantly, students themselves are raising the call for civics education that is more attached to their lives. In Rhode Island, Aleita Cook and her fellow students, have filed a federal lawsuit against the state, arguing that failing to prepare young people for citizenship violates their Constitutional rights. According to her interview by the New York Times, Cook, who has never taken a class in government, civics, or economics, indicated that her education has left her with gaping holes in her understanding of many practical questions about modern citizenship, from how to vote to “what the point of taxes are.”  On April 20, 2018, hundreds of thousands of students walked out during the National School Walkout to protest gun violence in the largest collective civics lesson in recent memory. These examples demonstrate that a comprehensive overhaul of civics education is needed.

Yet out-of-school time programs may be uniquely positioned to fill in some gaps and provide models for what education – civic (and otherwise) – must look like in the future. Many of the most innovative civics courses are adapted from, inspired by, or facilitated in partnership with community-based programs:

If these strategies sound familiar, it’s perhaps because they are common and flexible tools housed right in the out-of-school time wheelhouse. We are experts at youth engagement;  rooted in the heart of our communities; flexible in our understanding of identity, diversity, equity and democratic self-governance; we create safe space in contested landscapes; and we understand how to act in the best interests of all people in order to foster the best possible developmental outcomes.

If these strategies feel increasingly critical to restoring the health of our democracy, it’s perhaps that the crises we face require them. In a socio-political environment in which “we must take sides” to advance the cause of justice, the developmental imperative that young people themselves bring to the table is clear – they need allies and partners to come alongside them, poised to support the kind of out-of-the-box, real-world civics education that all of us – whether young people or adults – will need to meet the 21st century at the intersection of our country’s – and the world’s – greatest needs. The curriculum is out there: let’s meet young people at the schoolhouse doors, and then move with them out into our streets and communities.

For breakfast, I had a yogurt and hot, black coffee.

Author: @aliciaw