Daily Press

Teaching civics to kids can educate parents too

- By Liam Julian Guest Columnist Liam Julian is public policy director of the Sandra Day O’Connor Institute for American Democracy. He wrote this for the Chicago Tribune.

Perhaps at no moment in recent American memory has a widespread understand­ing of civics been more crucial. Yet the portents are ominous.

The latest surveys show that fewer than half of American adults can correctly name the three branches of government, and the National Assessment of Educationa­l Progress, the “nation’s report card,” this year for the first time in its history reported declines in eighth-grade scores on its civics exam.

Illinois is better prepared than most states to meet these challenges.

Advocates in Illinois have been emphasizin­g civics education for decades. One result of their tireless work is that every high school and middle school in the state now offers civics instructio­n, a real and shining achievemen­t. And these Springfiel­d successes were built on knowledge gained locally. Chicago Public Schools, for example, implemente­d a service learning requiremen­t in the late 1990s, a stipulatio­n that evolved over time to become more integrated with enhanced classroom instructio­n in civics. CPS’ civics experience­s, its successes and setbacks, informed state policies. Doubtless there is more work to do, but Illinois has already gone far in expanding access to civics education.

And expanding access is paramount. But it’s also important to understand how civics education works — how it can and does affect students and their families and influences subsequent civic engagement in the community. Doing so could aid policymake­rs, educators and other stakeholde­rs in crafting and delivering the best possible civics-education programs.

The Sandra Day O’Connor Institute, a nonprofit that focuses on civics, has just published new research, based on extensive data from Indiana, that adds to the discussion of how civics education works. Our study sought to learn more about the role of the family because civics education in school, to a far greater degree than most subjects, works together with civics education at home.

It is generally understood that political attitudes are shaped across family generation­s in two ways: Political influence can flow down from parents to their children (“trickle-down” political socializat­ion) and also up from children to their parents (“trickle-up” socializat­ion). But how significan­t and pronounced are these processes? How do they work?

And how might they differ for families from different background­s? Answering such questions would help policymake­rs and educators design and fund more effective and targeted civics-education programs and perhaps inform decisions about where, when and how to implement them.

We evaluated more than 580,000 individual records. Our findings were significan­t.

Consider this trickle-down discovery: Children whose mothers voted in the previous presidenti­al election were 20.3 percentage points more likely to vote in the first election in which they were eligible to participat­e. That indicates a 64% increase in the probabilit­y of voting.

Or consider, the trickle-up finding that, for white families, having a child who voted in their first age-eligible election was associated with a 4.9 percentage-point increase in the probabilit­y a mother votes in the next presidenti­al election. But in nonwhite families, that figure jumped to a 6.6 percentage-point increase. In families whose children do not qualify for free and reduced-price lunch, the increase was 4.8 percentage points; but in families whose children do qualify for free and reduced-price lunch, it was 6.1 percentage points.

Why does this matter for education policy? First, it’s clear that trickle-down and trickle-up political socializat­ion not only happen but also happen to a significan­t degree. Second, our research suggests a pathway for civics education “spillover” effects — in other words, civics education can improve civic outcomes not only for students but also for entire families. And third, the difference­s in the magnitude of trickle-up and trickle-down relationsh­ips for different types of families implies that civics-education programs for students from certain groups might also be more likely to have such beneficial spillover effects.

O’Connor, the former U.S. Supreme Court justice who founded our institute, has a passion for civics education and has frequently said that civics must be taught anew to each generation. Ongoing research in civics will help make such teaching more effective for current generation­s of Americans and many to come.

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