When students turn 18, they are on the cusp of another performance gap that should grab education leaders鈥 attention: the voting gap. The youngest voters are 30 percentage points less likely to vote than older voters. Schools can play a critical role in closing this gap.
In a new book, 鈥,鈥 out today, researchers John Holbein of the University of Virginia and D. Sunshine Hillygus of Duke University make a compelling case that the reason young people fail to vote is not because they don鈥檛 care about politics or policy, but because they lack the skills and confidence to translate their ideals into action. Moreover, they say, some key changes to how teachers and education leaders approach civics education could go a long way towards strengthening and expanding the next generation of young voters.
Holbein spoke with 澳门跑狗论坛 about what the research shows about improving civics and helping K-12 students prepare to be active voters.
EdW: It was pretty shocking to see that most civics classes in the United States have had absolutely no effect on students鈥 later voting. (See chart.) Has civics just become less effective in encouraging young people to become active citizens than it was in the past?
JH: If you go back all the way to the student cohort that graduated in 1950 鈥 when you look at individual students who took more civics classes in high school, they were no more likely to vote as they became eligible to do so than students who didn鈥檛 take civics. I think that鈥檚 kind of profound. In our minds we had this idea that there was this time when civics was so much better and really, there was no golden age of civics education.
You and Hillygus argue that courses have focused too much on teaching civics facts and history, which has not been shown to change behavior. Why do you think American civics education has focused so overwhelmingly on the cognitive side?
I think the No Child Left Behind performance accountability plays a role. Schools have gotten used to [fact-focused instruction] being the structure of math and reading programs. But I also think鈥攁nd there鈥檚 some evidence from our qualitative interviews with civics teachers鈥攖hat this is the go-to approach to avoid controversial topics. Right? A lot of civics teachers told us in our interviews that they were terrified of some parents coming and complaining to principals, school boards, [or] superintendents about them discussing climate change or gun policy or, you know, name any contemporary political debate. And so they sort of felt safer in this realm of teaching historical things, teaching things that you could memorize and regurgitate on a bubble-sheet civics exam. I think that鈥檚 really a thing.
In the book you talk about the 2016 election as a 鈥淪putnik moment鈥 for civics education. What did you mean by that?
We鈥檝e definitely seen a change since 2016. The election, the Parkland [school] shooting, the March for Our Lives movements as well. We were doing our interviews in 2017, late 2016, and we were hearing this bubbling of discontent among civics teachers. Like we鈥檝e all gotten to this point where we鈥檙e kind of dissatisfied with civics and we鈥檙e concerned about the current state of the world. And I think there鈥檚 just really an opportunity, right? Civics isn鈥檛 for the most part engaging and leveraging this type of energy [from student interest in politics], but there is an appetite for change. 鈥 There鈥檚 a real groundswell of interest in doing civics differently and I think there鈥檚 a real dissatisfaction with this sort of bubble-sheet civics that we鈥檝e seen for a long time. I haven鈥檛 seen that manifesting in new policy yet for large-scale changes to civics, but definitely, it鈥檚 wanted by teachers.
How can schools engage students in civics without imposing activities in a way that might turn them off?
I think it鈥檚 fair to worry about compelling people to do things. There鈥檝e been a couple of studies that have looked at various, mostly localized programs like Democracy Prep charter schools 鈥 about getting students out and volunteering in the community as a part of their broader curriculum. And those have shown a positive effect for requiring civic engagement. And I鈥檝e also done some work on compulsory voting in Brazil. 鈥 Some people worried that compelling young people to vote would have a negative impact on their civic motivation, their engagement in other forms of civic participation. And we don鈥檛 actually find that that鈥檚 the case. There鈥檚 no backfiring going on there. So I would say it鈥檚 a viable thing to have as part of their education that students be engaged in their communities.
You mention a number of examples of potentially more effective ways to teach civics. For example, Democracy Prep charters structure their entire schools around civic engagement. But what can schools do without a total overhaul?
It doesn鈥檛 need to be the case that schools need to be either a Democracy Prep school or nothing. They can encourage young people to register [to vote] and help them practice going through what is a new and an intimidating process for them.
U.S. public education is rooted in the belief by early American leaders that the most important knowledge to impart to young people is what it means to be a citizen.
If America is experiencing a civic crisis, as many say it is, schools may well be failing at that job.
This article is part of an ongoing effort by 澳门跑狗论坛 to understand the role of education in preparing the next generation of citizens.
See other stories in the Citizen Z series here.
Do you have a great idea for teaching students about civics? Share it with us.
The First-Time Voter program [a separate program from Democracy Prep] was a one-time demonstration in classrooms, just a little bit less than an hour long, giving young people the practical knowledge that they needed to vote. It involved a voting demonstration; talking to [students] about the importance of voting to contemporary issues; really focusing on the practical nuts and bolts about voting itself. So that was like a one-time demonstration and there were some significant positive benefits that came from that. So, I think the lesson learned there is that anything that schools do to move towards applied, practical distillation of the experience, that鈥檚 going to help.
We hear a lot about young people just not caring enough to get involved civically, but your interviews with students suggested sometimes the opposite was happening: Students decided not to vote because they worried they didn鈥檛 know enough to make a good decision and were afraid of making a mistake. Is that common?
Yeah. So, we were really interested by that finding as well. Young people seem to think they need to know more than they actually need to know when picking politics, whereas older voters seem to not lack that confidence. I think there鈥檚 something to be said about experience, right? Older citizens are like, 鈥極h yeah, I know how that works. I know what that process looks like.鈥 For young people, it鈥檚 just intimidating and kind of scary, especially for many of them growing up in households that don鈥檛 talk about politics and don鈥檛 hear about contemporary politics in their schools very much. The idea of being plunged into the deep end of voting was kind of intimidating.
There is a certain piece of confidence and self-efficacy that needs to be a part of a civics curriculum, because this lack of confidence is really striking to us. I can imagine a world where schools are giving young people the opportunity to overcome some of these fears: 鈥極h, I know how a voting booth works, we鈥檝e done that in class;鈥 or 鈥極h, I know what鈥檚 going on in politics [in this referendum] because in class we read these newspaper articles. 鈥︹ I don鈥檛 think you can actually fill the entire [civics] gap this way. But I think there is a certain piece of confidence and self-efficacy that needs to be a part of civics curriculum because this lack of confidence is really striking to us.