In the last
posting, the point was made that typical teachers see their jobs as conveying
the information contained in a course’s textbook. That reality places the textbook as defining curricular
content for any given course. In the
case of high school government, the textbook that is overwhelmingly used is Magruder’s American Government textbook.[1]
So, if one wants to ascertain the content of government at the
high school level, reviewing the content in Magruder’s
would give one that information. On
the other hand, if one wanted to do the same for the middle school level, one
could look at comparable civics textbooks, for example Glencoe Civics Today: Citizenship, Economics, and You.[2]
In addition to this Glencoe book, there
are various textbooks that are popular and widely used at the middle school
level.[3] In all cases, the choice of a book is left to
the district.
In considering this relationship between curricular content and
textbook content, one should understand that teachers are not generally mindful
of how the text reflects a curricular choice; they just know that the book is
what they have been given to teach the course in question.
The following description will indicate that more is involved in
this choice. In what follows, this
writer is attempting to get at the assumed motivation the authors, publishers,
and adopters of the text had in mind when Magruder’s
for high school students was chosen.
Further, the writer has selected a singular topic that he feels
reflects a social capital concern. He
indicates how this text, Magruder’s,
treats that topic as this will be an efficient way of determining how much this
text addresses this central concept. The
writer feels that Social Security is particularly suitable.
Below, this posting will outline how this textbook covers Social
Security, but before that description is offered, it is useful to contextualize
this information. This posting looks at
three concerns: how does the text handle
the topic of citizenship, how does the text provide information about factors
associated with social capital such as community, and why does the review
select Social Security?
To begin, one
does not find citizenship, an important aspect of civic instruction, within the
general text of the book. Instead,
scattered among its pages is a series of inserts entitled “Citizenship
101.” As such, the message is that this topic
is a supplement to what is important.
The
inserts contain several descriptive accounts that give general advice, usually
in perfunctory language, on common activities available to citizens.[4] This writer finds this treatment of citizenship
to be easily ignored or lost as a teacher works through the content of the
book. This aspect of the text is very
telling as it betrays a lack of concern or real commitment toward encouraging
an active citizenship.
Adding
to this context, the rest of the text further avoids social capital
concerns. For example, the text has
few or no words to describe or otherwise treat the following concepts which are
deemed to be supportive of social capital: community, community development,
neighborhoods, charities, or non-profit organizations; that is, one cannot find
these topics in the text’s index.
And a final contextual concern is to answer the question
of why Social Security? It was chosen
because it is felt to be the most interpersonal program that
the Federal Government runs, especially its retirement program. In effect, the program has one segment of the
population providing for another. It
works by collecting a FICA[5]
tax from those young enough to work and uses those funds to provide benefits
for the older generation that is of retirement age.
In
short, Social Security is an intergenerational compact. By setting up this compact, the Federal
Government unites the interests of citizens to be closer together and by doing
so, potentially encourages a more tangible sense of partnership among the
citizenry. And yet, one would be
hard-pressed to find citizens who would describe Social Security with a
language that would convey this sense of social capital at work.
Few
citizens seem to understand this basic relationship. Instead, Americans speak of the program as
something providing benefits they are due because they paid into it all their
working years. They see it as a forced
savings program. This is not an accurate
depiction.
Many
would be surprised, for example, to know that if a person lives a normal
lifespan, he/she will most likely receive more in benefits than if the taxes
were voluntarily saved and accrued normal interest returns.[6] Yet the program’s essence of being this demonstrable
partnership – or an element of one – seems to go un-noticed.
With
that context, how does Magruder’s describe
this program? On page 289, it points out that members
of Congress are covered by Social Security;
Circa page 440 informs that Social
Security is an independent agency and is not housed in one of the “Cabinet”
departments;
It describes on page 460 that Social Security
is a social insurance program funded by a social insurance tax;
On page 461, it classifies the FICA
tax as a regressive tax; that is, it is a “flat” tax up to a certain income
level and income above that amount is not taxed;
Finally, on page 469, the book explains that
the program, as an entitlement program, has “uncontrollable” expenditures. That means that the monies are automatically
spent without having to secure new authorization.[7]
This
last point is, of course, only partly true in that this spending can be
controlled – increased, limited, or eliminated – if the law that authorizes the
program is changed by Congress. That’s unlikely, given the popularity of the
program among the citizenry. Such a move
would be political suicide for those who would fundamentally threaten Social
Security.
In
sum, Magruder’s does not describe the
interpersonal or intergenerational foundation of the program, much less explain
it and, due to the lack of such instruction, little is done to inform and
encourage a more “partnered” view of Social Security. This, of course, enables, in part, the
misunderstanding of the program described above.
So,
overall, Magruder’s, as demonstrated
by this limited evidence, does little to promote social capital. It, instead, promotes a natural rights
view. If one is encouraged to look at
the textbook and see if he/she agrees with this assessment, the book can be easily
obtained by acquiring it at just about any public high school.
One
should have a list of governmental departments or agencies in mind when
reviewing the book. He or she should go
back to the index and look at how extensive and in what manner that part of the
government is explained. An overall
question in such a review can be: does
this description review a government policy or program that reflects the voice
of the people of the United States or is it described as a bureaucratic based
public service that is there for the consumption by citizens?
For
those in favor of promoting social capital, the above would probably be
disheartening. It begs the
question: should Magruder’s be gotten rid of?
Definitely not. The book is a
good reference book and that’s how it should function in the classroom.
As
a “go-to” source for structural information about what agencies and departments
exist and make up the government, the text can be of recurring value. What a teacher, though, should keep to
his/her counsel is what direction the course he/she teaches should follow.
Whether
that teacher uses an approach that attempts to bolster social capital or not, that
decision is one that should be made for a particular time, class, and school.[8] In most cases, this writer believes that’s
the way a course should be guided.
[1] Willian A. McClenaghan, Magruder’s American Government (Florida
Teacher’s Edition) (Boston, MA: Prentice Hall/Pearson, 2013).
[2] Richard C. Remy, John J. Patrick, David C. Saffell, and Gary
E. Clayton. Glencoe Civics Today:
Citizenship, Economics, and You.
New York, NY: McGraw Hill
Glencoe, 2008.
[3] See James E. Davis, Peter Woll,
and Phyllis M. Fernlund, Civics: Government and Economics in Action (Upper
Saddle River, NJ: Prentice Hall
Publisher, 2009) AND William H. Hartley and William S. Vincent, W. S., Holt American Civics (New York, NY: Holt, Rinehart, and Winston, 2003).
[4] Given the overall challenge of “teaching” an almost
800-page textbook in fewer than 18 weeks, it is hard to imagine that these
inserts get much attention.
[5] FICA stands for Federal Insurance Contributions Act.
[6] Louis Jacobson, “Medicare and Social Security: What You Paid Compared with What You Get,”
PolitiFact accessed
September 11, 2016.
http://www.politifact.com/truth-o-met
er/article/2013/feb/01/medicare-and-social-security-what-you-paid-what-yo/.
[7] Willian A. McClenaghan,
Magruder’s American Government (Florida Teacher’s Edition) (Boston,
MA: Prentice Hall/Pearson, 2013).
[8] This is not to say that district or state authorities
should not issue a curriculum. But no
matter how extensive such efforts are, there is always quite a bit of leeway
teachers have interpreting these authoritative dictums.
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