A Crucial Element of Democracy

This is a blog by Robert Gutierrez ...
While often taken for granted, civics education plays a crucial role in a democracy like ours. This Blog is dedicated to enticing its readers into taking an active role in the formulation of the civics curriculum found in their local schools. In order to do this, the Blog is offering a newer way to look at civics education, a newer construct - liberated federalism or federation theory. Daniel Elazar defines federalism as "the mode of political organization that unites separate polities within an overarching political system by distributing power among general and constituent governments in a manner designed to protect the existence and authority of both." It depends on its citizens acting in certain ways which Elazar calls federalism's processes. Federation theory, as applied to civics curriculum, has a set of aims. They are:
*Teach a view of government as a supra federated institution of society in which collective interests of the commonwealth are protected and advanced.
*Teach the philosophical basis of government's role as guardian of the grand partnership of citizens at both levels of individuals and associations of political and social intercourse.
*Convey the need of government to engender levels of support promoting a general sense of obligation and duty toward agreed upon goals and processes aimed at advancing the common betterment.
*Establish and justify a political morality which includes a process to assess whether that morality meets the needs of changing times while holding true to federalist values.
*Emphasize the integrity of the individual both in terms of liberty and equity in which each citizen is a member of a compacted arrangement and whose role is legally, politically, and socially congruent with the spirit of the Bill of Rights.
*Find a balance between a respect for national expertise and an encouragement of local, unsophisticated participation in policy decision-making and implementation.
Your input, as to the content of this Blog, is encouraged through this Blog directly or the Blog's email address: gravitascivics@gmail.com .
NOTE: This blog has led to the publication of a book. The title of that book is TOWARD A FEDERATED NATION: IMPLEMENTING NATIONAL CIVICS STANDARDS and it is available through Amazon in both ebook and paperback versions.

Friday, April 29, 2022

JUDGING PAROCHIAL FEDERALISM, IX

 An advocate of parochial federalism continues his/her presentation[1]

In this blog’s presentation of a critical review of parochial/traditional federalism by an advocate of that construct, the attention turns to the next commonplace, the student.  What is known about the nature of students in relation to the principles of parochial federalism?  This posting begins a review of evidence regarding that nature and the conclusions that can be derived from it that support the use of that construct as the foundational basis for a civics curriculum.

          Some of the issues addressed below will directly pertain to the individual interests of students; others will deal with long term interests that affect young people within the wider society.  This presentation will address the following areas of concern:  student interests, student problems, and student educational requisites.

          More specifically, it will answer the following questions:

 

·      What personal student interests are benefited by using the parochial federalist construct in the teaching of government and politics at the secondary level?

·      What social student interests are benefited by using that construct?

·      What economic student interests are benefited by using that construct?

·      What political student interests are benefited by using that construct?

·      And what pedagogic student interests are benefited by using that construct?

 

What follows is not an extensive inquiry into these issues (each can be the topic of extensive study), but a general review which sufficiently helps justify the adoption of this construct.

Personal Student Interest

          At the individual level, when attending a secondary school, students can be generally described as being in the adolescent period of their lives.  This blogger, in his upcoming book, treats this period in a young person’s life extensively.[2]  In that treatment, he employs a relatively simple model of maturation offered by Georg Wilhelm Fredrich Hegel.  Here, a more complex model is cited.  To further describe this period of life, Erik Erikson’s[3] psychological stage model is useful in depicting the personal needs of adolescents.

          For each stage of development, Erikson identifies a central crisis the individual must work through in order to mature into the next stage that ultimately leads to a well-defined adult individual.  Corresponding to the years of secondary school years (for most young people), they are the central conditions or crises as identity versus identity confusion (during adolescence) and intimacy versus isolation (during young adulthood).

          The former crisis is characterized by adolescents beginning to question previously internalized attitudes, values, and beliefs.  These elements have been accepted in previous stages of development without much thought or evaluation.  As the young person meets and interacts with a greater variety of people who hold and espouse a diversity of ideas, a natural questioning of held beliefs, values, and attitudes ensues.

          At the same time, the adolescent takes note of inconsistencies between professed beliefs and actions by significant socializing agents in their lives, such as parents and teachers.  This also leads to questioning emotional states of disillusionment or a romantic, irrational commitment to these values, attitudes, and beliefs, leaving the person with a “true believer” idealism.

          This questioning, if it happens, is central to the individual addressing such central questions as Who am I?  What sort of person should I be?  What gender, occupational, or social roles should I play?  It behooves youngsters to solve these issues with the least amount of turmoil as is possible in order to become well-adjusted adults.

          Political ideals, both as they pertain to formal political settings and to informal, day-to-day situations, are sources of values, attitudes, and beliefs.  To avoid an inordinate sense of duplicity that would accompany simplistic observance of political realities, the adolescence period would be the appropriate time to learn how and why one’s political institutions were formed or developed as they are.

          By actually reviewing and analyzing the works of political actors from the past, students can test and realistically judge and theorize as to the conditions and contexts which prevailed as those actors, including the founding fathers, made their decisions.  Parochial federalism facilitates this sort of analysis in a highly dramatic and challenging manner.  How?  By encouraging the sort of questions that get at how and why America fell upon a republican polity apart from a monarchial basis that it carried here from the British Isles.

          Stated in other words, a justified American identity was/is promoted, i.e., an identity based on core republican values[4] which encouraged/encourage civic virtue.  The story of sacrifices and sincerity of the founding generation served/serve as healthy standards of honor and integrity.  These are stories not falsely embellished, but true accounts of the founding and succeeding generations as they met and dealt with the realistic political challenges of their days.

          The student’s identity can be tied into the on-going story of the American experiment in which every generation has and will continue to play important developmental roles.  The argument here is that the inheritance of this tradition gives the individual a psychological place defining an identity steeped in integrity.

          Erikson’s next developmental stage is intimacy versus isolation.  This crisis usually faces the late adolescent or young adult.  American government is often taught in the twelfth grade (the course titled civics is usually offered at a lower grade during middle school years).  In high school, that would make students seventeen or eighteen when most are facing the above-described crisis.

          Usually, such concerns are experienced as these students are attempting to form healthy intimate relations.  Healthy relations are characterized by being able to trust others, feelings of sufficient independence or autonomy, the capacity to take initiatives to accomplish goals, a healthy self-assuredness or esteem that promotes a realistic confidence, and a good sense of what the individual wants out of life.[5]

          All of these characteristics should be enhanced by believing that a person’s political environment and tradition promulgate a sense of partnership that the parochial federalist construct emphasizes.[6]  Here, one needs to distinguish between the ideals of parochial federalism as explained in this blog and the realities of American political life. 

Obviously, teenagers can tell the difference between a course at school saying that there exists a set of ideals expected of citizens and a society which is quite different.[7]  On the one hand, there are the ideals of the republican foundation of this nation, and, on the other hand, there are the realities of a nation generally adhering to the values and attitudes associated with the natural rights perspective (the opposing dialectic view).

Such a course of study, in itself, cannot engender such personal qualities of trust and a sense of partnership with fellow citizens.  Instruction under the guise of parochial federalism must be sensitive to this duality, be able to discuss it, analyze it, and present to the student the challenge of dealing with it, just as the founding generation dealt with their incongruities.  This is the civic challenge of their times.  The challenge not only relates to the issues regarding what benefits the nation provides, but also to the interests of their personal development.

In a few words, therefore, the aim of a parochial federalist civics course (including American government) is to have students reflect on those issues that present themselves as one considers – in meaningful ways – the challenge of being a partner in the grand partnership of a federated nation.  The rewards are not only aimed at the welfare of the partnership but also in assisting the maturation of students during adolescent years.

The next posting will look at student social interests.



[1] This presentation begins with the posting, “A Parochial Subject Matter” (March 11, 2022).  The reader is reminded that the claims made in this posting do not necessarily reflect the beliefs or knowledge of this blogger.  Instead, the posting is a representation of what an advocate of parochial federalism might present.  This is done to present a dialectic position of that construct.

[2] That book is still in the development phase, but this blog will prominently announce its availability when the time has come.

[3] Erik Erikson, Identity:  Youth and Crisis (New York, NY:  Norton, 1968).

[4] Gordon S. Wood, Creation of the American Republic 1776-1787 (Chapel Hill, NC: University of North Carolina Press, 1969/1968).

[5] Erikson, Identity.

[6] Daniel J. Elazar, “Federal Models of (Civil) Authority,” Journal of Church and State, 33 (Spring, 1991), 231-254.

[7] What change theorists call an espoused theory and a theory-in-use.  See Kenneth D. Benne, “The Current State of Planned Changing in Persons, Groups, Communities, and Societies” in Planning of Change, eds. Warren G. Bennis, Kenneth D. Benne, and Robert Chin (New York, NY:  Holt, Rinehart and Winston, 1985), 68-82.

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