Posted on 07/21/2003 11:33:40 AM PDT by freepatriot32
Nation-building begins at home.
Earlier this month, a reporter for The State newspaper in Columbia, S.C., asked students from two local elementary schools why we celebrate the Fourth of July.
Kids from one school said what you would expect kids to say. Fireworks, food and lots of fun figured prominently in the answers.
But kids from the other school Nursery Road Elementary had a very different take on the holiday. Fireworks were barely mentioned. Instead, every single response included the words freedom or independence and sometimes both.
My personal favorite (from fifth-grader Vante Lee):
We celebrate the Fourth of July because we celebrate our freedom and the chance to make our own decisions.
Whats going on at Nursery Road? Nothing less than a quiet revolution that could change the direction of American education.
Last week, a Nursery Road team of teachers, administrators and parents came to Washington, D.C., to meet with teams from 10 other schools from around the nation. They are all part of the First Amendment Schools initiative sponsored by the Association for Supervision and Curriculum Development (ASCD) and the First Amendment Center (www.firstamendmentschools.org).
After only one year as a First Amendment Project School, all 11 schools had remarkable stories to tell stories of schools working hard to create laboratories of democracy and freedom.
Students at Nursery Road know how to talk about American principles because they are busy practicing them. This spring, for example, these elementary students registered more than 300 high school students to vote. Meanwhile, at Edith Bowen Elementary School in Logan, Utah, kids began broadcasting their views on the schools television station. (The first editorial was by a third-grader sounding off about the food left on trays in the lunchroom.)
And its not just about students. Many of the parents at Fairview Elementary School in Modesto, Calif., are recent arrivals to this country. Some are still learning to speak English. But after hearing that Fairview was a First Amendment School, they got excited about exercising their new freedoms. Barely weeks into the project, parents were circulating a petition asking for a fence in front of the school to protect their kids from traffic.
Freedom works.
Students and faculty at Cesar Chavez Public Charter School in Washington, D.C., are working together to implement a new school-governance plan that gives everyone a voice in decision-making. Lanier High School in Jackson, Miss., just held a constitutional convention, drafting a plan to ensure that students have input in shaping the life of the school. (Its up for a vote this fall.) And in Massachusetts, Hudson High School spent the year building a new governance model a bold experiment in student leadership and democratic dialogue that begins this fall.
These schools (and a growing number of others like them) are powerful answers to the hand-wringing in Washington these days about the poor state of civic education in schools, the low interest among young people in the democratic process and the deterioration across all age groups of civic virtue and engagement.
Recent proposals by the White House and Congress to improve instruction in civics and history will help. But learning about freedom and justice, however important, can never be enough; educating for democratic citizenship must be more than an academic exercise.
The solution is to involve students and all members of the school community in the actual practice of democratic freedom. Nobody learns very much about exercising the rights and responsibilities of citizenship from textbooks; American principles must be lived and experienced.
Whats at stake? Just ask the kids.
This year five third-graders at Nursery Road wrote and illustrated a story about the loss of the First Amendment. It seems that one day the president discovered the First Amendment was missing. No one could find it. No one could even remember what it said.
Then Congress started passing illegal laws, including a law against the freedom of speech. This is one of the things the First Amendment states that Congress cant do, write the kids. Even the president had to ask if he could speak freely. The citizens got mad at Congress.
Fortunately, a child from South Carolina saw what was happening and begged her mother to take her to Washington, D.C. Although they had to wait a day to see the president, the following morning, the child from South Carolina proudly recited the First Amendment to the president.
The story ends with this: The president was so happy that he decided to gather the citizens and tell them the good news. Everyone was delighted that the First Amendment was back. Life in the United States returned to normal with freedoms for everyone.
Lets keep it that way. Lets make every school a First Amendment School.
I won't be the one to make a CFR comment. :-)
The program sounds pretty good except for a couple of troubling aspects.
Students and faculty at Cesar Chavez Public Charter School in Washington, D.C., are working together to implement a new school-governance plan that gives
everyone a voice in decision-making. Lanier High School in Jackson, Miss., just held a constitutional convention, drafting a plan to ensure that students have input
in shaping the life of the school. (Its up for a vote this fall.) And in Massachusetts, Hudson High School spent the year building a new governance model a bold
experiment in student leadership and democratic dialogue that begins this fall.
While I do think that some involvement by children in the decision making process is warranted at the high school level, these are still kids. I would rather see exercises in mock town settings where the city officials were rotated off and the other classmates could vote up or down various city plans etcetera. Empowerment shouldn't be overplayed before adulthood. Still, learning those principles at teenagers is a good thing. Adults do still need to be the ultimate decision makers.
As for the use of the term "democratic", don't kid yourselves what's driving this. It's isn't quite as totally conservative as this article would have you believe. True conservatives don't hawk the term "democratic" constantly. People who want you to vote "democratic" do.
The End.
One sentence I never thought I'd see. Maybe they gave them a civics lesson also. Is Civics even taught anymore? Or has it been replaced by "I'm OK, You're OK: The Inclusion of Homosexuals in America?"
/ sarcasm
One sentence I never thought I'd see. Maybe they gave them a civics lesson also. Is Civics even taught anymore? Or has it been replaced by "I'm OK, You're OK: The Inclusion of Homosexuals in America?"
/ sarcasm
One sentence I never thought I'd see. Maybe they gave them a civics lesson also. Is Civics even taught anymore? Or has it been replaced by "I'm OK, You're OK: The Inclusion of Homosexuals in America?"
/ sarcasm
The End.
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