Civics for All: 6 Elements
The Civics for All Initiative
Common K-12 Curricular Requirements, Frameworks, and Traditions:
- Annual mock elections each November, K-12
- One New K-12 Civics/Elections unit in each year’s social studies classes; depending on teacher preference and student interest, units would be 3 – 10 class periods each autumn
- Two K-12 Civics Frameworks Banners:
- Essential Civics for All Questions – posted in every K-12 classroom
- Political Spectrum – posted in all gr: 6-12 social studies classrooms
- Media literacy – grade 5-12, especially related to electoral politics and current events
- Civics website – updated reg. with shared curriculum, elections lesson plan ideas, current events lessons, links, etc.
- Community engagement:
- Voter registration/participation drives – K-12 students, classes, and schools can compete to see who can register the most new voters in their communities and/or get already registered voters (including parents) to actually vote.
- Parent/guardian engagement – students are given homework assignments to discuss the mock elections issues and races with their parents/guardians.
- Interdisciplinary Civics (optional) – K-12 teachers in non-social studies disciplines are encouraged to relate their classwork to the mock elections (e.g. math classes could help students understand taxation formulas, science could help students understand environmental initiatives, etc.)
- School culture of democracy (optional) – principals, teachers, and schools can make the mock election process a celebration of democracy and community engagement to whatever extent desired via ASB involvement, parent and community involvement (election officials), etc.
View: Kathleen Vasquez Recommendation to SPS Curriculum & Instruction Committee; Feb. 8, 2016