Dear Social Science teachers,
sharing an article (a book review) worth reading and thinking about ...
regards
Guru

Education’s most important job is to teach students to take an active role
in their democracy, starting in their own communities.

Albert W. Dzur <http://bostonreview.net/author/albert-w-dzur>

http://bostonreview.net/education-opportunity/albert-w-dzur-teaching-citizenship

*Awakening Democracy Through Public Work: Pedagogies of Empowerment*

Harry C. Boyte with Marie Ström, Isak Tranvik, Tami Moore, Susan O’Connor,
and Donna Patterson - Vanderbilt University Press, $24.95 (paper)
<https://www.vanderbilt.edu/university-press/book/9780826522184>

For decades, political theorist Harry Boyte has been a pioneer of
community-level, direct democracy. His central thesis is that democracy is
“public work,” “sustained, uncoerced effort by a mix of people who create
things of lasting civic or public significance.” This perspective invites
people of all walks of life and professions to consider how, in their daily
routines, they can contribute to a stronger, more supportive, and more
participatory social environment. Boyte describes his view of citizenship
as “an approach . . . in which *citizens are co-creators, builders of the
common world, not simply voters and volunteers who fit into that world or
protestors who oppose it*.” He has been honing these ideas since his
college days, when he was field secretary to Martin Luther King, Jr., in
the Southern Christian Leadership Conference and encountered the southern
citizenship schools that arose from the civil rights movement. In his new
book, *Awakening Democracy Through Public Work*, Boyte, now a senior
scholar, offers a mature introduction to his thinking on citizen action,
social change, and civic education.

Civics education rarely teaches that ground-level citizen action is
integral to having healthy communities. Democracy is something that happens
elsewhere, and only to adults.

Central to *Awakening Democracy Through Public Work *is Boyte’s belief that
education’s most important role is to teach children and young adults how
to be good citizens. Boyte focuses in particular on the Public Achievement
program he and his co-authors have developed into an international network.
(The book is dedicated to Boyte’s colleague Dennis Donovan, whose school,
St. Bernard’s Elementary School, was the first experimental site for Public
Achievement.) Most U.S. public schools used to offer some basic training in
citizenship through civics courses that taught political history and basic
facts about democratic institutions and the Constitution. Increasingly
these programs, meager as they were, have been jettisoned by schools to
make more space for STEM and teach-to-the-test curricula—but even when such
basic civics education is still offered, it rarely seeks to convey the
importance of ground-level citizen action to the functioning of healthy
communities and institutions. Democracy is something that happens
elsewhere, and only to adults.

Boyte’s Public Achievement program for K–12 youth adopts a very different
model. In it, “teams of young people . . . work over the school year on
issues they choose. Their issues must be legal, tackled nonviolently, and
make a public contribution.” At the beginning of the year, students hold an
“issues convention” to discuss and prioritize the problems people most want
to address during the year; then they form teams to work on them. Though
the youth are coached by college students affiliated with Public
Achievement, the priorities, strategies, and work are their own.
Opportunities to hold positions of real responsibility—or for that matter
fail (in ways that are instructive)—are therefore significantly greater
than in service-learning programs that offer students ready-made volunteer
roles. As Boyte puts it, “In Public Achievement, young people are conceived
as co-creators, citizens today, not simply citizens-in-waiting. They help
to build democracy in their schools, neighborhoods, and society.”

My favorite example of Public Achievement in the book comes from a
Minneapolis public school.

One team of eight boys, including Mexican immigrants, Native Americans, and
European Americans, expressed anger at the state of their bathroom. The
stalls had no doors. Toilet paper and other supplies were missing. The
walls were covered with obscenities. They named themselves “the Bathroom
Busters” and decided to remedy the mess. Two coaches helped them to
understand the issue in public terms larger than the bathroom itself. They
decided, after discussion, that the issue was twofold: students’ disrespect
for common property and the school system’s disrespect for students.

In taking on this problem, the team had to learn how to deal with school
bureaucracy, wrangle funding from district offices, gain the assent of
union representatives—in short, do politics. But they also had to learn how
to work with students who were not interested in Public Achievement. Though
the bathrooms were fixed by the end of the year, the problems returned the
next year as graffiti started showing up on the walls. So, the team started
meeting with other kids in the school to develop a plan. What emerged was a
mural created by the students for the bathroom walls, which remained
graffiti free.

What I like so much about this story is not that it was a success but that
it reveals what kids can contribute to the everyday functioning of a highly
institutionalized domain such as an urban public school. There are always
scarcities, differences of opinion, and hierarchies of power and authority,
even in the best funded and most well-run organization. To learn how to
deal with these in a constructive way should be the essence of democratic
education. Notice, too, that a problem that could have easily been labeled
a “disciplinary” or even “criminal” issue—and thus a police matter—was
instead addressed by the students themselves, thus keeping their classmates
clear of the criminal justice system. This is a self-taught lesson in how
to create social order.

In Public Achievement programs, problems that would otherwise be labeled
“disciplinary” or “criminal” issues are instead addressed by the students
themselves, thus keeping their classmates clear of the criminal justice
system.

One of the most important tools learned by students in a Public Achievement
program is called “power mapping.” In power mapping, an issue is discussed
by the group to determine who has a stake in it. Power mapping is a
“relational practice,” notes Boyte, which “radically changes young people’s
perception of ‘power.’ Rather than seeing power only as an abstract
category (‘others have power; we are powerless’), participants discover
many kinds of power, many different interests around any question, and many
potential ways to go about tackling a problem.” Another tool taught in the
program is called “public evaluation,” in which students debrief at the end
of a team meeting to talk about what worked, what didn’t, and whether
people are accomplishing tasks they have set out for themselves—a process
of learning how to be accountable to others. In addition to these basic
tools, Public Achievement is marked by a fundamental commitment to
self-direction: “Teams usually begin their work by setting their own rules.
. . . They give their teams names. . . . They develop mission statements.
They designate and rotate roles—moderator, timekeeper, notetaker,
evaluation leader, and others.” Unfortunately, schools often subtly—or not
so subtly—discourage autonomy, equality, and voice; Public Achievement, by
contrast, thrives on these.

These are, of course, common practices in the worlds of community
organizing and social movements. But public work differs from these other
forms of citizen action. Boyte points out that social movements can be
successful at mobilizing dissent and opposition while failing to develop
the kinds of common interests and civic skills that can sustain collective
efforts over time. A kind of “reductionist” and “Manichean politics” can
emerge that “polarizes civic life, objectifies and abstracts ‘the enemy,’
erodes citizenship, communicates that politics is warfare, and narrows
government to a ‘target’ for gaining resources, not a partner in problem
solving.” Likewise, local community organizing efforts can sometimes
neglect the role of non-local sources of power in blocking progress on
solutions. Public work in this way is both hybrid and innovative, building
on core aspects of historical organizing and social movement efforts while
seeking broader impact than the former and deeper roots than the latter.

At a time of great concern about the health of even established
democracies, public work thinking offers a compelling diagnosis. Along with
the blustering autocrats who are the obvious foes of democratic
institutions, there is a more subtle and pervasive threat: a systemic way
of thinking about politics and policy that places a premium on distance,
expertise, and cool professionalism. Where the autocrat threatens democracy
loudly, caging dissidents and investigating critics, the technocrat
threatens it more quietly, creating the impression that the big problems
facing society ought to be left to the people with degrees from the best
schools. Boyte writes:

Technocracy, control by experts, is accelerated by the efficiency principle
and the digital revolution. It reifies settings that once served as sources
of civic learning, turning not only schools but also congregations, local
businesses, unions, nonprofits, and government agencies into service
delivery operations. This dynamic renders civic life an off-hours activity
in civil society, usually through volunteering or community service, which
are experienced as oases of civic idealism and decency in a degraded world.
A great challenge of our time is to develop a politics to enlist the broad
energies of all citizen to address our multiplying challenges.

If, as some suggest, it is anger at elites and the feeling of being shut
out of meaningful decision-making that provide the greatest fuel for
authoritarian politics, then the public work strategy of collective
engagement and empowerment—beginning with the youngest citizens—may be the
single best remedy.

A key element of technocracy is the cultural capital generated by
university credentialing and networks, and Boyte makes clear that colleges
and universities have a critical role in awakening democracy. Public work
thinking is a deep challenge to academic business as usual because no
stand-alone center or program for encouraging “community engagement” will
suffice. What is needed is a dramatic shift away from seeing citizenship as
some kind of moral bonus, something to be done in the off-hours. This calls
not so much for a shift in professional ethics as for a shift in practices:
the current generation of academics must become sensitive to the
debilitating effects of the technocratic world they have helped reproduce.
They must also embrace the public dimensions of fields such as law
enforcement, education, and health through horizontal collaborative
relations with non-specialists. Augsburg University’s nursing program, for
example, encourages that nurses pursue “meaningful interaction with ‘people
living on the margins’” in the course of fulfilling their medical duties.

Boyte’s vision for democratic renewal offers compelling remedies to the
pervasive sense of dispossession felt by citizens across the ideological
spectrum.

Boyte’s vision for democratic renewal is invigorating, even as it raises
important practical concerns. First is the chronic issue of how to embed
practices such as those taught by Public Achievement into ongoing
institutional environments without succumbing to tick-the-box bureaucracy.
The program’s commitment to student autonomy helps here, but it will be
good to learn more over time about how that commitment can be
institutionalized in school systems without turning rigid. Second, it is no
small challenge that the world of direct democracy is so distant from the
world of finance capital. Many problems that harm local communities are not
problems that can be realistically solved at the local level, but having an
impact on politics at the federal, state, or even city level is
increasingly difficult without deep pockets. Third, Boyte highlights mostly
positive stories, but grassroots citizen politics can sometimes reject
distant and aloof yet also sensible and useful expertise. Local, sometimes
violent, conflicts over federal land management in the West come to mind.
Do we have to take the good public work along with the bad for the sake of
general democratic renewal? It is especially useful here for civic studies
scholars to differentiate efforts that welcome in diverse forms of
knowledge—working with rather than against professionals, for example—from
those that shield themselves from critique.

Regardless, *Awakening Democracy Through Public Work* offers compelling
remedies to the pervasive sense of dispossession felt by citizens across
the ideological spectrum—the sense that “our” institutions and politics do
not have a meaningful place for us, that they move along without our help.
We are informed and scolded by intellectuals, mobilized and asked for our
vote or donations, but we are not treated as citizens who share
load-bearing responsibility for law, policy, or community development.
Boyte’s theory of public work and his practical Public Achievement program
are critical for thinking about how institutions, politics, and public life
might be recaptured in nonviolent, non-autocratic ways.

Education Team
IT for Change
Bangalore
www.ITforChange.net
080 26654134

-- 
-----------
1.ವಿಷಯ ಶಿಕ್ಷಕರ ವೇದಿಕೆಗೆ  ಶಿಕ್ಷಕರನ್ನು ಸೇರಿಸಲು ಈ  ಅರ್ಜಿಯನ್ನು ತುಂಬಿರಿ.
 - 
https://docs.google.com/forms/d/e/1FAIpQLSevqRdFngjbDtOF8YxgeXeL8xF62rdXuLpGJIhK6qzMaJ_Dcw/viewform
2. ಇಮೇಲ್ ಕಳುಹಿಸುವಾಗ ಗಮನಿಸಬೇಕಾದ ಕೆಲವು ಮಾರ್ಗಸೂಚಿಗಳನ್ನು ಇಲ್ಲಿ ನೋಡಿ.
-http://karnatakaeducation.org.in/KOER/index.php/ವಿಷಯಶಿಕ್ಷಕರವೇದಿಕೆ_ಸದಸ್ಯರ_ಇಮೇಲ್_ಮಾರ್ಗಸೂಚಿ
3. ಐ.ಸಿ.ಟಿ ಸಾಕ್ಷರತೆ ಬಗೆಗೆ ಯಾವುದೇ ರೀತಿಯ ಪ್ರಶ್ನೆಗಳಿದ್ದಲ್ಲಿ ಈ ಪುಟಕ್ಕೆ ಭೇಟಿ ನೀಡಿ -
http://karnatakaeducation.org.in/KOER/en/index.php/Portal:ICT_Literacy
4.ನೀವು ಸಾರ್ವಜನಿಕ ತಂತ್ರಾಂಶ ಬಳಸುತ್ತಿದ್ದೀರಾ ? ಸಾರ್ವಜನಿಕ ತಂತ್ರಾಂಶದ ಬಗ್ಗೆ ತಿಳಿಯಲು 
-http://karnatakaeducation.org.in/KOER/en/index.php/Public_Software
-----------
--- 
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups 
"SocialScience STF" group.
To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email 
to [email protected].
To post to this group, send email to [email protected].
For more options, visit https://groups.google.com/d/optout.

Reply via email to