Detroit Boosts Civics Course by Including People of Color and Community History
The district says it is infusing local history and city government into civics classes, as well as promoting community engagement
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During a social studies class at the all-girls Detroit International Academy, 10th grade students last week learned about a historic student protest that occurred in April 1966 at Detroit Northern High School.聽
The students took turns reading passages via laptop computer and discussed the incident with their teacher on Wednesday. They learned that the Northern students, who were Black, were protesting what they described as inadequate educational resources at their school that had a white principal.聽
鈥淭he students refused to take that type of treatment,鈥 said teacher Tal Levy. 鈥淲ho wants to read the next paragraph called 鈥榮tudent demands鈥?鈥
鈥淪ome of the demands were to remove the principal,鈥 a student responded. 鈥淩emove the campus policeman, provide the information on the academic standards of the school, and create a student-faculty council for the school.鈥澛犅犅
The lesson is part of a new approach to teaching history at Detroit Public Schools Community District (DPSCD), the state鈥檚 largest public school district. For DPSCD, it is using a traditional approach of infusing local history and city government into its high school civics course 鈥 but with more cultural inclusion and promoting community engagement.聽
鈥淭he district鈥檚 mission focuses not just on education, but student empowerment and civic engagement,鈥 said DPSCD Superintendent Nikolai Vitti.
Citizen Detroit partnered with the school district to revise its 鈥淒etroit: A Manual for Citizens,鈥濃痑 textbook that had not been updated in decades. The manual is available in both hard copy and electronic form and can be taught via laptop computers and tablets.
Citizen Detroit is a civic education nonprofit that 鈥渇ocuses on educating Detroiters about issues that are critical to our well-being; seeking to increase civic literacy; and working to establish a standard of public accountability from local and state elected leadership,鈥 according to its website.
The Skillman Foundation, also a partner, helped to fund the effort, which took a little over two years to complete.聽
The manual and workbook were published in time for the 2021-22 school year and used in every high school civics class. Students spend about six weeks learning about local government.
鈥淭he idea is to give people a historical understanding of the function of city government and an understanding of each city department and how the citizens can be engaged, and their voices are heard,鈥 said Sheila Cockrel, Citizen Detroit CEO and a former member of the Detroit City Council.聽
Civics is a stand-alone 10th-grade semester-long course that is a graduation requirement from the Michigan Department of Education. In Detroit, civics-related material is woven into every grade from kindergarten through high school as required by the Michigan Grade Level and High School Content Expectations.
Students learn about public policy issues and work to form their own opinions on those issues before they get to their civics class in 10th grade, according to Elizabeth Triden of DPSCD鈥檚 curriculum and instruction office.聽
Critical race theory
DPSCD鈥檚 bolstered civics effort preceded Republicans in Michigan and nationwide trying to ban critical race theory (CRT) in schools. CRT is a college-level theory that examines the systemic effects of white supremacy in America, but lawmakers have the issue into the K-12 policy debate.聽
, introduced by Rep. Andrew Beeler (R-Port Huron), does not explicitly reference CRT, but prohibits schools from teaching any curriculum that includes the 鈥減romotion of any form of race or gender stereotyping or anything that could be understood as implicit race or gender stereotyping.鈥
,, introduced by state Sen. Lana Theis (R-Brighton), explicitly bans 鈥渃ritical race theory鈥 from being taught in schools and threatens to cut 5% of the school鈥檚 funding if the state determines that it is violating the law. The Senate Education and Career Readiness Committee, which Theis chairs, approved the bill last October.聽
鈥淐ritical race theory threatens Michigan鈥檚 K-12 students with a dangerous false narrative about our country and its place in the world,鈥 said Theis at the time. 鈥淚t is an extreme political agenda that is manipulating academia and now targets private businesses, public institutions and, sadly, our K-12 classrooms. Our schools should be teaching students our country鈥檚 real history, including its faults and flaws, but especially this nation鈥檚 founding principles of individual freedom, liberty and equality that so many have given their lives to defend. Critical race theory is an affront to everything our country stands for. Our children should be taught to respect each other equally because of their humanity, not to discriminate based on some identity group or race.鈥
Sen. Erika Geiss (D-Taylor) a 鈥渟hortsighted, inappropriate and corrupt bill.鈥
鈥淭his bill will have a profoundly chilling effect on education, our ability to foster talent development, and career readiness for today鈥檚 Michigan youth, which would ultimately 鈥 and negatively 鈥 impact the state鈥檚 economic future,鈥 said Geiss, who is Afro-Latina, a parent of school-aged children and a former public school educator.
The Michigan State Board of Education a resolution in January to push back against the CRT bills.聽
Addressing cultural diversity
For years, DPSCD鈥檚 social studies department published a book guiding students through the structure of Detroit鈥檚 government and 鈥渃ommunity civics.鈥澛
The book, and corresponding civics course, was taught in Detroit schools as early as 1938 and the final class occurred in the late 1970鈥檚. The school district鈥檚 school enrollment has been majority African American since 1963.聽聽
The 1968 manual, for example, wrote about 鈥 tenure as Michigan governor, but does not point out that he was a slave owner.聽
The document does point out that 鈥渆very Detroit public school has been open to children of all races since 1869鈥 but doesn鈥檛 mention that Fannie Richards, a Black woman operated a private for Black children prior to 1869 and the school district all the way to Michigan Supreme Court to racially integrate the school district. Willam Ferguson was among the first Black students to attend the school district. In 1892, he the first African American elected to the Michigan House of Representatives.聽
It also does not point out that the Board of Education was all white until Remus Robinson, a Black physician was to the body in 1955. It does not mention that the school district did not have a Black principal until Beulah Cain Brewer in 1947.聽聽
The new publication, 鈥淐itizen Manual Detroit,鈥 is designed to help its users develop a deeper understanding of the history of Detroit, its government,鈥痶he government鈥檚 roles and鈥痳esponsibilities, and how citizens of the city can鈥痺ork within the government systems to bring about change.鈥犅
It offers the contributions of organizations such as the African-American-led Trade Union Leadership Council, League of Revolutionary Black Workers, Westside Mothers, as well as Latin Americans for Social and Economic Development (also known as LASED), Arab Community Center for Economic and Social Services (also known as ACCESS) and others.聽
鈥淭hese organizations, and many more, were established by individuals and groups that identified needs within their respective communities and used civic engagement and civic action to address them,鈥 the new manual reads.聽
The new manual also includes passages that highlight African American broadcast legends Martha Jean 鈥淭he Queen鈥 Steinberg; William V. Banks, the lead force in launching WGPR-FM 107.5 radio and WGPR-TV 62, the nation鈥檚 first Black-owned television station as well as Haley Bell and Wendell Cox, who launched WCHB-AM 1440 radio, the nation鈥檚 first Black-owned station founded in 1956 after federal license application.聽
鈥淭he Citizen Manual is a concrete example of [student empowerment and civic engagement],鈥 said Vitti. 鈥淏y recognizing students鈥 expertise on their neighborhoods鈥 needs, inspiring them with the rich history of activism in Detroit, and equipping them with concrete tools to get involved, students see themselves as leaders capable of building a stronger Detroit.鈥澛
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