This Civic Learning Week, Small is Mighty

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In just a couple weeks, classrooms, libraries, museums, statehouses, and community centers across the country will light up with learning and engagement for Civic Learning Week (March 9–13). We are optimistic that this year’s Civic Learning Week will be another important “fluorescent moment for civics,” in which thousands of local activities across all 50 states paint a national picture of support for civic learning and engagement.

Educators and communities, by their everyday actions in and out of classrooms, have knit together our civic fabric since the inception of our country. Today—when trust in institutions is fragile, misinformation often travels faster than facts, and polarization continues to tear at that very civic fabric—education could not matter more. This is a powerful representation of the “small is mighty” ideal at the core of the American experiment. 

Co-hosted by iCivics and the Democratic Knowledge Project, this year’s Civic Learning Week will kick off with the National Forum on March 9 and 10 in Philadelphia. Gathering in the city where the Declaration of Independence was debated and signed is a deliberate choice—Philadelphia is where the American experiment was fully articulated and, 250 years later, we ask and answer what it now requires of us. 

Under the theme Liberty and Learning: Civic Education at 250, the Forum will bring together educators, students, policymakers, researchers, and civic leaders from across sectors to confront the real questions facing constitutional democracy in the United States today:

  • How do we cultivate pluralism in polarized times?

     

  • How do we maintain the importance of human connection in civic learning and equip students to navigate the democracy and economy of the AI age?

     

  • How can states and districts move beyond minimum civics requirements to meaningful civic outcomes?

     

  • What would it look like to make civic learning as central to education as literacy and numeracy?

We will showcase state-level progress—33 states strengthening K–12 civic education over the past 5 years; 37 states now requiring civics course time for graduation; and 44 states offering civics-related professional development. And we will press forward on what remains unfinished.

We will highlight the growing body of evidence that civic learning strengthens not only a meaningful understanding of our history and civic infrastructure, but also the “four Cs” employers consistently demand: critical thinking; communication; collaboration; and creativity. Across the country, community partners are creating service-learning opportunities that connect young people to real-world problem-solving. Governors are spotlighting new legislation. Museums are hosting public readings of founding texts. District leaders are integrating the Roadmap to Educating for American Democracy into curriculum planning. 

This is not only activity, it is palpable momentum for a growing movement. Our nation recognizes the need to educate for citizenship. This is new and important. Local, community-oriented actions are mighty when it comes to civic engagement: A classroom discussion. A local forum. A new exhibit at a museum. A social media campaign to highlight the values of the Declaration. These moments build our civic strength and our commitment to democracy.

The semiquincentennial is not just a commemoration. It is a generational opportunity. 

Civic Learning Week is our chance to move from reflection to resolve. The kindergartners entering school today will graduate in 2038, the 250th anniversary of the Constitution’s ratification. What civic foundation will they stand on?

Democracy does not renew itself. It is taught. Practiced. Protected.

And it begins—again—in classrooms and communities across the United States.

iCivics is the managing partner of Civic Learning Week, which is further supported by the American Academy of Arts & Sciences; Bezos Family Foundation; Center for Revitalizing American Institutions at the Hoover Institution; Daniels Fund; Democratic Knowledge Project; Ibis Group; Jack Miller Center; MacArthur Foundation; Maher Charitable Foundation; Microsoft; More Perfect; National Council for the Social Studies; and Stuart Foundation.

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