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Mihailidis, Paul; Ramasubramanian, Srividya; Tully, Melissa; Foster, Bobbie; Riewestahl, Emily; Johnson, Patrick; Angove, Sydney – Journal of Media Literacy Education, 2021
It is often assumed that media literacy serves to protect and uphold democratic practice and that media literate citizens are the best safeguards for democracy. However, little attention is paid to defining this practice and its relationship to ongoing inequities within democratic societies. In this essay, we argue media literacy operates from…
Descriptors: Media Literacy, Democracy, Social Differences, Citizen Participation
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Li, Jing; Moore, Danièle – Language and Intercultural Communication, 2020
Informed by the notions of public pedagogy, cultural production as civic/political participation, and the multiliteracies perspective, this article explores the connection between (inter)cultural/art production, public pedagogy, and civic education in a community festival setting in Vancouver's Downtown Eastside. Drawing upon three examples of…
Descriptors: Teaching Methods, Multiple Literacies, Citizenship Education, Citizen Participation
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Lavine, Peter – Social Education, 2014
Political participation is seriously unequal. For example, young adults who finish college vote at almost three times the rate of contemporaries who have dropped out of high school. That gap translates into disparities by race and class. Effective civic education can reduce such inequality and make our democracy more representative. Teaching…
Descriptors: Voting, Teaching Methods, Citizen Participation, Civics
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O'Leary, Lisa S. – New Directions for Institutional Research, 2014
This chapter describes how canonical correlation was used in conjunction with an item response theory model to address the relationship between college students' civic engagement involvement and attitudes as undergraduates. The constructs of interest were students' participation in civic, political, and expressive activities, as well as…
Descriptors: College Students, Citizen Participation, Correlation, Program Descriptions
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Sternberg, Robert J. – Change: The Magazine of Higher Learning, 2012
Standardized admissions tests such as the SAT (originally stood for "Scholastic Aptitude Test") and the ACT measure only a narrow segment of the skills needed to become an active citizen and possibly a leader who makes a positive, meaningful, and enduring difference to the world. The problem with these tests is that they promised, under…
Descriptors: College Admission, College Entrance Examinations, Standardized Tests, Academic Aptitude
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Flanagan, Constance; Bundick, Matthew – Liberal Education, 2011
By definition, democracies depend on citizens' involvement in their governance. Laws and institutions are necessary but insufficient for sustaining such systems; democracies also depend on certain psychological dispositions in the people, with an ethic of civic participation, trust in others, and tolerance of dissenting views topping the list. The…
Descriptors: Undergraduate Students, Citizen Participation, Late Adolescents, Young Adults
Levine, Peter – Center for Information and Research on Civic Learning and Engagement (CIRCLE), University of Maryland, 2006
CIRCLE has recently published three detailed fact sheets that update, refine, and in some respects complicate, our knowledge of the links between college education and civic engagement (see "College Attendance and Civic Engagement Among 18 to 25 Year Olds," "Civic Engagement among Recent College Graduates," and "Civic Engagement among 2-year and…
Descriptors: College Graduates, College Attendance, Citizen Participation, Meta Analysis
Howard, Robert W. – Principal Leadership, 2004
"Social capital" describes the strength of community as measured by the connections and levels of trust among its members. These connections are both formal and informal and the benefits include better health and better academic achievement. In this article, the author proposes two types of experiments to determine whether the…
Descriptors: Nongovernmental Organizations, Academic Achievement, Service Learning, Social Capital