Civic Curriculum Proposal

Members of the Civic Education group developed a curriculum with civic education at its heart. These recommendations come out of their research into the strengths and weaknesses of similar program. This curriculum was written by high school students Wilfrin F,  Moises S, Sofia G R, Olysa A, Bintou T, Bruce L, Justin N and Daniel V.

Purpose and Summary:

Our curriculum is designed to teach students the importance of advocating for their rights and using their voices within society. We believe that all people belong civically in a society, and as a result their voices must be heard. We can achieve this by redesigning the existing high school curriculum in New York City to prepare students for purposeful and effective civic education. Through our socratic seminar-style classes, activities and forms of study, students are able to pick a side of a topic and develop an argument for it. This allows them to use their advocacy and research skills to create a strong argument, which is a fundamental skill of a well-rounded civic leader. Overall our curricular goal is not only to make the youth aware of their political climate, but to also create well-informed civic leaders that use their power to make a difference within their community. 

We believe this curriculum could create civically educated youth that are ready to engage with their communities in the beginning of their adulthood, regardless of the major they will be pursuing in college. The material taught in our curriculum merges academic and civic learning in order to provide both civic and career preparation without disregarding one for the other. Equal development of civic education across majors, communities, and schools is necessary and should not be subject to a school’s funding or location. We believe everyone deserves to be taught how to participate as members of their communities, regardless of where they go to school. Our curriculum embodies this mission by merging academic subjects--like English, History, Government and the Arts--while also incorporating civic activities in our Math and Science courses. 

We propose using the following curricular lenses in order to develop students' civic knowledge and consciousness:

Main Learning Lenses

Learning Objectives By Year

During freshman year, students usually take foundation level classes to develop their academic abilities. The redesign for the freshman curriculum is still learning the high school basics of global history, language, math and science; however, these classes will include activities such as mock trials (history) and thought seminars based on introductory civic readings (english). Just like the NYS curriculum, global history will be taught before US history, as students can use their knowledge about the world and apply it as a way to see American history in a new lens.

After the foundations taught in freshman year, students are now ready to study a more specific, local lens of civic education. In this year, students will start learning more about rhetoric, US history, and may have the time to take elective classes to actually start applying their foundational skills. This in turn starts transforming civic education as a property of academics rather than being an extension of education. 

This year students can peak their learning in their high school career. At this point they will be taking AP classes with harder academics, and this can be an opportunity to even more so immerse students in topics, readings and activities that reflect civic engagement. They can also choose to commit themselves to harder extracurricular projects such as capstone projects, engineering solutions to community projects, or joining debate and speech competitions that may help them inquire deeper in things they learn in class.

At this point during high school many students will already have earned all the credits required to graduate. We can transform school into a place where their talents, hobbies and skills can be developed to catapult them into their future careers. Civic engagement can transform into an applied practice rather than something embedded in education. Schools could offer new activities such as community engagement, community problem solving and higher studies of society, speech and democracy. This is where electives can become extremely relevant in developing a student's future engagement.

The Curriculum

“Just Mercy” Bryan Stevenson

"Freire's Banking model of education” Paulo Freire

“Defining Racism” Beverly Tatum

“The Constitution” Usa

“13th” documentary on Netflix. 

“Poverty, by America” Matthew Desmond 

“American Factory” documentary on netflix

“The Seven Lesson Schoolteacher” John Taylor Gatto.

“A Letter to Teachers” James Baldwin

“On The Social Contract” Jean Jaques Rousseau

“Trans-National America” Randolph Bourne

“Capitalism and Freedom” Milton Friedman 

“Declaration Of Independence” Usa

“Magna Carta” 

“Trial and Death of Socrates” Plato

“The Tragedy of The Commons” Garret Hardin

“Universal Declaration of Human Rights”