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NACE
was launched in 2000 and now has more than 200 group and individual
members committed to advancing civic knowledge and engagement. NACE
believes the time has come to band together to ensure that the next
generation of citizens understands and values democracy and participates
in the ongoing work of building democracy in America.
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NACE
Task Forces

Liasion To Group Members:
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Support and Advocacy:
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What's New in Civic Education and Youth
Civic Engagement Work .... (July/August 2006 Archive Section)
February
28, 2007
The
Public Education Network (PEN) announces the following:
Eight
for 2008: Education Policy Guidebook for Presidential Candidates
Education remains a top 10 priority for the American people even during
a divisive war and amid competing national concerns, according to
the Gallup Poll. It is especially salient for today's presidential
candidates because the historic No Child Left Behind Act (NCLB) has
increased Washington's influence over and responsibility for local
schools to unprecedented heights. And with stubbornly persistent racial
and income gaps in student outcomes, it is clear that too many public
schools still are not the engines of equal opportunity they should
be. In a new report, Education Sector offers eight education ideas
for the 2008 presidential campaign. They cover the educational spectrum,
from preschool to higher education. They range in scope from big ideas
that would chart entirely new directions for policymaking to others
that would simply help schools and colleges improve what they are
already doing. These ideas are neither Democratic nor Republican.
They are pragmatic solutions to real problems that both parties can
get behind. They have realistic goals and price tags. The eight ideas
include: (1) Unlock the Pre-K Door; (2) Offer Teachers a New Deal;
(3) Create a National Corps of "SuperPrincipals"; (3) Open
New Schools in Low-Income Neighborhoods; (4) Launch Learning into
the 21st Century; (5) Reward Hard-Working Immigrant Students; (6)
Give Students a Roadmap to Good Colleges; and (7) Help Students Help
Others.
For
more go to: http://www.educationsector.org/research/research_show.htm?doc_id=464943.
February
26, 2007
The
U.S. Department of Education announces the following grant
opportunity:
Grant
Competition for the Cooperative Civic Education and Economic Education
Exchange Program (Federal Register: February 16, 2007 [CFDA# 84.304A])
Purpose
of Program: The Cooperative Civic Education and Economic Education
Exchange Program provides grants to improve the quality of civic education
through cooperative civic education exchange programs with emerging
democracies.
- Applications Available: February 16, 2007.
- Deadline for Transmittal of Applications: April 2, 2007.
- Eligible Applicants: Organizations in the United States experienced
in the development of curricula and programs in civic and government
education and economic education for students in elementary schools
and secondary schools in countries other than the United States, to
carry out civic education activities.
- Estimated Range of Awards: $500,000-$1,000,000;
- Estimated Average Size of Awards: $1,000,000;
- Estimated Number of Awards: 1-2.
Additional
Information: Applicable regulations, priorities, and other information
are available in the Federal Register notice.
Additional
information is available online at: http://www.ed.gov/legislation/FedRegister/announcements/2007-1/021607i.html
February
21, 2007
Skills
and Dispositions
"The
arrival of a new year always generates, at least in aging school principals,
a cerebral expedition for an annual symbol. What can possibly encapsulate
the hopes, dreams, frustration, and passions that lie ahead for our
school community in 2007?
One
night in January, at a faculty colleague's suggestion, I spent 20
minutes listening to an audio recording that has been rocketing around
the Internet. It purports to be an unedited copy of a young man's
dialogue with a series of customer-service representatives as he attempts
to untangle his cellphone bill. In a nutshell, the listener learns
that no one at this giant telecommunications company understands how
to use a decimal point. Simultaneously hilarious and depressing, the
recording sounds genuine.
And
even if it isn't, the growing sense of consumer frustration, the bewildered
and unhelpful bureaucratic bumbling of the "service department,"
and the fundamental, appalling lack of basic numeracy strike a telling
chord. We've all been there, "on hold" literally and figuratively,
desperate to navigate the shoals of incompetence.
Still, in 2007, the dumbing down of America is not front-page news
in my local paper or anywhere else. The fact that, even at the highest
circles of "service response" in a global communications
company, employees cannot comprehend the significance of decimals
and place value merely reminds us of other recent commentary on America's
workforce: "If you can recognize the french-fries icon on the
register keys, you're educated enough"-at least to work at a
fast-food enterprise. The active vocabulary of an American 14-year-old
is 20 percent of what it was 60 years ago. If Americans read at all,
they read USA Today or People. Better than The Star, I suppose. What
is Britney up to these days?
The
real question prompted in my mind by the Internet recording was this:
Why do families entrust their children to a school such as ours? There
are obvious answers beyond everyone's reasonable expectation that
teachers will make sure that, at the end of the experience, students
can read, write, express themselves, and cipher-that is, that they
will comprehend the meaning and power of a decimal point, in math
class, in an engineering calculation, in a checkbook, on a telephone
bill, in life. But education-especially at the elementary level-is
as much about "dispositions" as it is about skills; it's
about developing attitudes and approaches that color a lifetime. It's
not just how to read (or calculate, or speak to an audience, or collaborate
with a partner to solve a problem); it's learning the lifelong value
of reading, developing the habits of open-mindedness, of sharing,
of discerning, of thinking about others. Skills, after all, are black-and-white;
dispositions add the color
" By Nicholas S. Thacher, Feb.
7, 2007, Education Week.
February
20, 2007
- The
Public Education Network (PEN) announces the following:
"Playground
Heroes: How Can We Teach Kids To Stick Up For Their Peers Who
Are Bullied?"
-
In "Playground Heroes" in the latest issue of Greater
Good magazine, researchers Ken Rigby and Bruce Johnson make clear
that research has not only documented the great prevalence of
bullying at schools; it's also shown that quite often, children
serve as passive bystanders to bullying. They neither join in
the bullying nor try to stop it, but just watch it from the sidelines.
Yet when these observers do intervene, more often than not they're
successful in stopping the bullying. So why don't they intervene
-- and perhaps more importantly, how can parents and teachers
effectively encourage them to intervene when it's appropriate
for them to do so? Drawing on the results from a six-country study
that they ran, called the International Bystander Project, Rigby
and Johnson offer concrete strategies for helping children act
on their best intentions. For more go to: http://greatergood.berkeley.edu/greatergood/current_issue/rigbyjohnson.html.
February
19, 2007
A
Lesson in Government From Behind the Scenes
"Just
before noon one recent day, a group of middle school students rushed
into the building where Virginia's General Assembly meets. They had
one question on their minds.
"Does
anyone know the soup of the day?" one boy yelled.
Thomas
Cohen, 13, ran down the steps to Chicken's, a tiny basement restaurant.
He checked the menu and scrawled "Chicken Gumbo" and "Beef
Noodle" on a notepad he'd pulled from the pocket of his navy
blue blazer.
Thomas,
a seventh-grader at Fairfax County's Frost Middle School, is one of
72 middle school students from across the Old Dominion who are spending
seven weeks here in the state capital fetching lunch, copying documents
and stuffing envelopes for lawmakers. Between deliveries of soup and
stationery, they're also getting an up-close look at democracy. The
capital becomes their classroom, with lessons in state government
more vivid than any they get in school..." Maria Glod, 1/19/2007,
The Washington Post.
February 9, 2007
-
The
Compass Institute in collaboration with the National
Service-Learning Partnership at the Academy for Educational
Development are pleased to announce the creation of the Service-Learning
Providers Network.
Why:
To strengthen the quality of service-learning practice through
improved professional education. The network's vision is to ensure
that every person that provides service-learning professional
education and technical assistance possesses the knowledge, skills,
attitudes, and materials to design and deliver transformative
and lasting staff development.
Who:
Service-learning consultants and staff developers; service-learning
trainers working with schools; community-based organizations as
well as those working with institutions of higher education; teacher
mentors; administrators; community-based organization trainers;
service-learning technical assistance providers; and service-learning
organization training directors among others.
What:
Through in-person and virtual opportunities, a peer-to-peer learning
network will help people connect. Members of the network will
be able to utilize a professional development library that houses
tools for training and technical assistance. In addition, local
staff developers will have the opportunity to contribute their
own expertise to help their peers.
They
are asking those that provide professional education to complete
a 10-minute
online survey to help guide next steps in designing materials
and networks that are responsive to the field's needs. Please
complete the survey by no later than February 28, 2007.
Results will be shared on the Partnership's website.
For
those attending the National
Service-Learning Conference in New Mexico in March, there
will be a workshop on the Providers' Network called "Overcoming
the Achilles Heal of Service-Learning: How to Ensure Practice
Excellence."
The
Providers' Network is being lead by Drs. James and Pamela Toole
of Compass Institute and the University of Minnesota
College of Education and School of Social Work.
There is also a 15-person advisory team representing a diverse
and talented cross-section of the service-learning field.
If you have any questions, contact toole003@umn.edu
or go to p-toole@comcast.net
for more information.
February
7, 2007
-
The
Center for Civic Education has received funding from
the National Endowment for the Humanities (NEH) to host
a three-week Institute at Loyola Marymount University
in Los Angeles. The Institute is entitled Political and Constitutional
Theory for Citizens: The National Academy for Civics and Government.
The Insitute will take place July 7-28, 2007, and all expenses
for travel, books, and per diem are covered by the grant, with
a modest amount left over for a stipend.
Access information on the Institute on the Center's website at
www.civiced.org by clicking
on the link for the NEH Institute for Political and Constitutional
Theory under "Recent Updates." At the site is the Application
for 2007, a brochure on the program, and the Course Outline and
Agenda for the 2006 Institute, both of which will be revised only
slightly for 2007.
February
6, 2007
-
The
Public Education Network (PEN) announces the following:
Grants
to Increase Impact of Service-Learning Projects on Climate Change
- Youth Service America and the Civil Society Institute
are awarding Red, White, and Green Climate Change Grants to design
a service-learning project that promotes awareness about climate
change and possible solutions. Projects should be youth-led, and
the service must take place between May 1 and October 31, 2007.
Maximum Award: $500. Eligibility: youth between the ages of 15-25
or to organizations that serve engage youth ages 15-25. Deadline:
March 9, 2007. For more go to: http://www.ysa.org/awards/.
February
5, 2007
-
CIRCLE
announces: High School Civic Engagement Activities Produce Academic
Benefits
New
CIRCLE research by Professors Alberto Dávila and
Marie T. Mora suggests that participation in voluntary community
service, service-learning, and student government activities during
the high school years enhance academic achievement. In two new
CIRCLE Working Papers Dávila and Mora, using data
from the National Educational Longitudinal Study of 1988 (NELS),
find that those civic engagement activities raise the odds of
graduation from college and improve high school students' progress
in reading, math, science and history. For example, they estimate
that service experiences—when required as part of high school
courses—raise the odds of graduation from college by 22 percentage
points.
While
the impact appears to be universally positive, different types
of activities affect demographic groups in distinct ways. Young
men, for instance, appear to make greater academic gains when
they participate in service activities : they are 29 percentage
points more likely to graduate from college on time if they have
engaged in service to fulfill a class requirement during high
school, controlling for the other factors measured in NELS. Student
government activities seem to produce the strongest effects on
female students.
For
more download the following:
-
CIRCLE Fact Sheet "An
Assessment of Civic Engagement and Educational Attainment"
-
CIRCLE Working Paper (#52) Civic
Engagement and High School Academic Progress
- CIRCLE Working Paper (#53) Do
Gender and Ethnicity Affect Civic Engagement and Academic Progress?
February
2, 2007
-
The
following has been added to Pew Charitable Trust's Youth
Civic Initiatives (Pew Prospectus 2007):
-
The Civic Initiatives program seeks to educate the American public
about the concepts of liberty and individual freedom that are
tightly bound up in Philadelphia's early history.
For
more go to: http://www.pewtrusts.org/ideas/ideas_item.cfm?content_item_id=3895&content_type_id=17&issue_name=Civic%20initiatives&issue=41&page=17&WT.mc_id=01/22/2007
February
1, 2007
-
The
Public Education Network (PEN) announces the following:
Grants
to Promote Neighborhood Safety - MetLife Foundation and the Local
Initiatives Support Corporation (LISC) are partnering to recognize
the work of innovative partnerships between community groups and
police to promote neighborhood safety and revitalization. Maximum
Award: $25,000. Eligibility: member organizations of partnerships
that include, but need not be limited to, community organizations
and police. Deadline: February 23, 2007. For more go to: http://www.lisc.org/section/areas/sec1/safety/awards/.
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