Opinion: Support teaching civics in middle school

Date:

Share post:

We support A3394/S854 to provide a civics course for middle school pupils in New Jersey public schools. We urge the NJ Assembly Education Committee to approve this legislation.
The League of Women Voters has spent 100 years empowering voters and defending democracy. Most people agree that Americans should know how our democracy functions, but a recent Annenberg Center survey reports that 60% of Americans can’t name the three branches of government. In New Jersey, only 39% of school districts require all students to take a civics course in any grade.
Ignorance provides a breeding ground for rumor, false information and fear, as we witnessed on Jan. 6, when an armed mob attacked the Capitol, the seat of our democracy. To reduce ignorance, we turn to our schools. A3394/S854 would provide instruction on the principles underlying the American system of constitutional democracy, the function and limitations of government and the role of citizens in democratic society.
A well-designed civics course teaches facts, enables students to examine current events and learn how to voice their opinion on local, state and national issues. And students who take a civics course are more likely to engage in community-building activities.
Support civics education. Approve A3394/S854.
Nicole Plett and Marcia Steinberg
League of Women Voters of Lawrence Township
Civics Education Committee
Lawrence Township

Stay Connected

549FansLike
36FollowersFollow

Current Issue

Latest News

Related articles

Bordentown Regional High School Theater Club to present One Act Play Festival

The Bordentown Regional High School (BRHS) Theater Club is proud to present their One Act Play Festival: "Rogues' Gallery" on Friday, April 26 at in the Bordentown Performing Arts...

Keep the eclipse sentiment

The April 8 total solar eclipse gave millions in the U.S., Mexico and Canada the rare opportunity to...

She said ‘no’ to the bullies

State legislation that would ban potential book-banners from doing so - dubbed "The Freedom to Read Act" -...

‘We have an obligation to innovate responsibly’

The first New Jersey Artificial Intelligence (AI) Summit not only convened business leaders, academics and government officials to...