Image of community members holding hands in a line
Keith Bishop / Getty Images

Civics lessons for a new moment

Antero Garcia talks about teaching civics in a highly polarized country during a pandemic.
September 28, 2020

With the 2020 election looming, there鈥檚 been plenty of talk about the importance of civic engagement, especially among young people. But civic-mindedness goes far beyond what people typically consider, says Antero Garcia, an assistant professor at 海角乱伦社区 Graduate School of Education.

鈥淥ftentimes when we talk about civics, it gets boiled down to, 鈥榊ou need to do your 鈥榗ivic duty,鈥 which means you need to vote,鈥 he says. 鈥淏ut there鈥檚 a larger array of what counts as a civic duty, particularly if we recognize that so many of the students in our schools are too young to vote or may not have the legal status in the eyes of the United States to be able to vote. This doesn鈥檛 exclude them from the responsibility of participating in our civic society.鈥

On this episode of School鈥檚 In, Garcia joins GSE Dean Dan Schwartz and Senior Lecturer Denise Pope to talk about what civic engagement really means and the role schools play in helping young people learn to understand and express it.

Civic-mindedness, Garcia says, is about building a sense of connection to one another and to a community鈥攍earning how to understand one another and the world. 鈥淭o me, this is the fundamental purpose of what schooling should be about,鈥 he says.

He offers ways to infuse civics lessons into all kinds of subject areas: for instance, having students in a math class collect data from their community to explore and question their own civic experience. 鈥淐ivics needs to happen in every classroom at every age,鈥 he says. 鈥淵oung people as civic actors play a fundamental role in where our country is going to go.鈥

The current pandemic presents a powerful but largely overlooked opportunity for meaningful civic learning, Garcia notes. 鈥淲e've spent so much time focusing on compliance and on [how structures can] operate at a limited capacity during this time that we haven't allowed students to actually question and imagine what this moment means.鈥

You can listen to School's In on , , , , and .


Faculty mentioned in this article: Antero Garcia