TY - JOUR
T1 - Rights and obligations in civic education
T2 - A content analysis of the national standards for civics and government
AU - Gonzales, Marti Hope
AU - Riedel, Eric
AU - Avery, Patricia G.
AU - Sullivan, John L.
PY - 2001
Y1 - 2001
N2 - A quantitative content analysis of the National Standards for Civics and Government revealed that concepts associated with traditional liberalism—citizens’ rights and freedoms—far outnumber concepts associated with classical republicanism or communitarianism (e.g., civic virtue, the reciprocal relation between citizens’ rights and their responsibilities to the public good). Moreover, this focus on rights and freedoms to the relative exclusion of duties and obligations may be at odds with a more collectivistic value orientation held by many members of ethnic and racial minority groups. Consistent with previous studies of civics texts, our analysis indicates that the concept of political participation plays a very small role in the National Civics Standards. Finally, the “subtext” of the National Civics Standards does little by way of reflecting the contributions of women and minorities to public life. Implications for civic instruction in increasingly heterogeneous public school classrooms are discussed.
AB - A quantitative content analysis of the National Standards for Civics and Government revealed that concepts associated with traditional liberalism—citizens’ rights and freedoms—far outnumber concepts associated with classical republicanism or communitarianism (e.g., civic virtue, the reciprocal relation between citizens’ rights and their responsibilities to the public good). Moreover, this focus on rights and freedoms to the relative exclusion of duties and obligations may be at odds with a more collectivistic value orientation held by many members of ethnic and racial minority groups. Consistent with previous studies of civics texts, our analysis indicates that the concept of political participation plays a very small role in the National Civics Standards. Finally, the “subtext” of the National Civics Standards does little by way of reflecting the contributions of women and minorities to public life. Implications for civic instruction in increasingly heterogeneous public school classrooms are discussed.
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U2 - 10.1080/00933104.2001.10505931
DO - 10.1080/00933104.2001.10505931
M3 - Article
SN - 0093-3104
VL - 29
SP - 109
EP - 128
JO - Theory and Research in Social Education
JF - Theory and Research in Social Education
IS - 1
ER -