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Curriculum

Amid Partisan Divide, Teachers Turn to Digital Game for Civics Lessons

By Benjamin Herold 鈥 February 28, 2017 8 min read
Teacher Kymberli Wregglesworth, left, assists Andrea Madison, a junior at Onaway High School in Michigan, navigate the iCivics digital game during a civics class.
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Civics education is having an extended moment in the spotlight, and technology is playing a critical role.

On the one hand, technology is feeding new problems: The rise of digital news and social media means that students are now exposed to a torrent of highly partisan information (and misinformation) about politics and current events.

But technology is also offering fresh solutions.

Take iCivics, a set of free online educational games developed by a nonprofit organization founded by former U.S. Supreme Court Justice Sandra Day O鈥機onnor. Last November, as the contentious presidential election came and went, the game was played roughly 3 million times, nearly twice as many as the year prior.

Much of that uptick was fueled by teachers hoping to engage their students without further inflaming often-raw emotions.

鈥淥ne of the things I like about iCivics is that it鈥檚 a place for students to go where they鈥檙e not going to get angry, because you know it鈥檚 not going to be slanted,鈥 said Jo Phillips, a veteran civics teacher at West Virginia鈥檚 Ripley High.

That鈥檚 the goal, said Louise Dub茅, the group鈥檚 executive director. Classrooms in both red and blue states need to remain focused on the processes by which government is supposed to operate, she said.

Every state now requires students to take courses in social studies or civics in order to graduate from high school, and 17 states now include social studies or civics-test results in their accountability systems, according to a December report from the 91制片厂视频 Commission of the States鈥 National Center for Learning and Civic Engagement.

Other digital and online games, such as the 鈥Mission US鈥 series or even the popular strategy game 鈥Civilization,鈥 are also used in the classroom to teach civics, history, and social studies. They may not captivate students鈥 attention quite like 鈥淎ssassin鈥檚 Creed鈥 or 鈥淢inecraft,鈥 but they鈥檙e likely more compelling for many students than a textbook.

Many educators have turned to iCivics, with its highly vetted content, because it can help inexperienced teachers provide a baseline of foundational knowledge, while also allowing classroom veterans to explore issues much further.

Still, even such well-regarded tools have been at times hard-pressed to stay relevant in the current political environment.

Elected officials from both parties are subjecting governmental institutions and norms to new stresses. And President Donald Trump has begun pushing a nationalist-populist agenda that often falls outside the familiar conservative-liberal political spectrum. Both present new challenges for civics educators, said Shawn Healy, a program director at the Robert R. McCormick Foundation, which seeks to foster a more engaged citizenry.

鈥淎re we doing students justice by teaching 鈥榟ow a bill becomes a law,鈥 when it doesn鈥檛 really work that way?鈥 Healy asked. 鈥淚t would be good if the whole field grappled with that.鈥

Dub茅 of iCivics acknowledges the challenges. But the U.S. system of government was designed to adapt, and with the help of technology, civics education should be expected to do the same, Dub茅 maintained.

鈥淎s the system evolves, we need to keep pace and stay relevant,鈥 she said.

To better understand how schools are using digital games to teach civics, 91制片厂视频 Week spoke with teachers from three different parts of the country.

RIPLEY HIGH SCHOOL | Ripley, W.Va.

Trusting a Digital Game to Find Middle Ground

Jo Phillips grew up in this small, strongly pro-Trump town of 3,200 near the Ohio line. She鈥檚 taught some combination of civics and U.S. government at the local high school since 2007.

As the country鈥檚 political discourse has become more sharply divided, iCivics has become her 鈥渞ight arm鈥 in the classroom, Phillips said. Partly, that鈥檚 because she can trust the game not to be biased.

鈥淚 try to point out both sides of everything, and I remind my students not to forget about the middle,鈥 Phillips said.

iCivics has also become a more integral part of her instruction as the school has added more technology. At first, students got the occasional chance to play the game in Ripley鈥檚 computer lab. Now, every student has his or her own school-issued digital device.

As a result, Phillips and her students have started to branch out into the full iCivics library, which now includes nearly 20 games. There鈥檚 鈥淲in the White House,鈥 about the electoral process. 鈥淓xecutive Command鈥 focuses on the roles and responsibilities of the president. 鈥淒o I Have a Right?鈥 aims to help students learn about the Bill of Rights.

Olivia Ludtman, 17, finds the games more engaging than the textbooks and paper articles her school used previously.

BRIC ARCHIVE

鈥淵ou get a hands-on experience,鈥 Ludtman said. 鈥淲hen we play iCivics in class, you can hear a pin drop.鈥

There can, however, be a downside to all that engagement, said Joseph Kahne, a senior researcher in the civic-engagement research group at Mills College in Oakland, Calif.

A wide partisan divide combined with strong emotions on different sides of key issues can make classroom discussions treacherous terrain, Kahne said.

And as political institutions are stressed in new ways, he said, teachers have to find ways to incorporate that reality into their instruction.

It鈥檚 a challenge that Phillips is still mulling, in part because she worries that the news media are being overly dire in how they portray the changes Trump has brought to Washington.

鈥淲e survived Nixon, we survived wars. The republic still works,鈥 Phillips said. 鈥淚f we focus on the chaos, it鈥檚 only going to paralyze us.鈥

MAYFAIR MIDDLE/HIGH SCHOOL | Lakewood, Calif.

Ensuring All Students Can Voice Opinions

For 13 years, Jeff Caron has taught U.S. history to 7th and 8th graders in this diverse working-class community in Los Angeles County, which went overwhelmingly for Democrat Hillary Clinton in the 2016 election.

This year, he said, it鈥檚 been a particular challenge balancing the needs of his class.

Many Mayfair students are closely watching the news, he said, in part because they鈥檙e stressed about what the new direction in Washington will mean for their own lives.

鈥淭hese kids are politicized like I鈥檝e never seen before,鈥 Caron said. 鈥淒uring the Obama presidency, they were more fascinated by the man. But now, with the changes in immigration policy and reports of roundups [of undocumented immigrants], the discussions are more fraught with tension.鈥

At the same time, though, Caron said a typical Mayfair class of 35 might include half a dozen students who strongly support the new Republican president. A lot of the teacher鈥檚 attention goes to making sure those students feel comfortable getting their say, he said. That鈥檚 especially true because many students with the majority opinion aren鈥檛 shy about expressing their disapproval of President Donald Trump.

鈥淢iddle school students can be cruel,鈥 Caron said. 鈥淚t鈥檚 up to me to make sure that everybody can be heard and can express themselves without being shot down.鈥

BRIC ARCHIVE

A game like iCivics helps, he said, by serving as a classroom 鈥渁nchor鈥 when a hot-button topic arises.

Take the president鈥檚 recent executive order halting the nation鈥檚 refugee program and temporarily banning immigration from seven Muslim-majority countries. The order was quickly put on hold by a federal appeals-court judge.

Some of Caron鈥檚 students sought to steer the conversation toward their personal dislike of Trump.

But their common experience playing iCivics鈥攁nd the fact that some of the content had stuck with the students because they enjoyed the game鈥攑resented an opportunity to channel that energy in a different direction, Caron said.

鈥淚t got us back to asking, 鈥榃hat is the structure of government?鈥欌 he said. 鈥淲e could start to judge what the president does by looking at the Constitution.鈥

ONAWAY HIGH SCHOOL | Onaway, Mich.

Teaching in a Sharply Divided Community

Kymberli Wregglesworth, who grew up in this small logging town at the northeastern tip of Michigan鈥檚 lower peninsula, faces a different dilemma.

Her classroom, like her state, is sharply split. Michigan went for Donald Trump by a total of just 10,704 votes in the 2016 election.

BRIC ARCHIVE

While Wregglesworth is a big fan of iCivics, she worries that the game can鈥檛 keep up with how quickly things have changed.

鈥淭his year is very different. People鈥檚 emotions are running much higher,鈥 said Wregglesworth, who has taught civics and world history at Onaway High for nearly two decades. 鈥淧robably 75 percent of my students have strong feelings about the new administration, and they鈥檙e pretty evenly split for and against.鈥

In the past, Wregglesworth said, she鈥檚 used iCivics to 鈥減rime the pump.鈥 The challenge was getting students interested enough to care about the larger lessons and discussions she had planned. But now, she said, her students don鈥檛 hesitate to express their opinions鈥攅ven if they might not be well-supported or appropriate for the classroom

鈥淭hings that would have been extremely controversial four or eight years ago, students will just come out and say now,鈥 Wregglesworth said. She described a recent class discussion that quickly escalated into an argument in which a student said, 鈥淎ll those people are terrorists anyway,鈥 referring to immigrants from countries affected by Trump鈥檚 travel ban.

A sculpture of George Washington is displayed on a hillside at the Moran Iron Works in Onaway, Mich.

That kind of highly controversial policy isn鈥檛 found in Executive Command, the iCivics game in which users assume the role of the president during his or her first 100 days in office. Instead, the game focuses on policy proposals that fall well within traditional mainstream Democratic and Republican positions.

鈥淭he bottom line is that life as a nonpartisan content developer has become radically more difficult because of the polarization that we see,鈥 said Louise Dub茅, the executive director of the nonprofit developer that makes iCivics. 鈥淧ositions previously fell along a narrow band, and now, that鈥檚 being challenged.鈥

Wregglesworth said curricular materials that better reflected the current policy environment might benefit some Onaway students, especially those who may not feel their positions currently have a place in the classroom.

Ostensibly, a digital game should be easier to update than a textbook might have been. But there鈥檚 also a worry about moving too rashly, Dub茅 said. Even as American democracy evolves, she said, iCivics wants to remain true to its basic mission.

鈥淲e believe the American democratic system and the way it is embodied in our Constitution and the rule of law is something that needs to be taught and defended,鈥 Dub茅 said. 鈥淲e won鈥檛 move with the wind or respond to any particular policy.鈥

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A version of this article appeared in the March 01, 2017 edition of 91制片厂视频 Week as Teachers Turning to Digital Games for Civics Lessons

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