
KAT
Promotes Literacy for Democracy
Reflections on Literacy
Addressing
Your Concerns:
Literacy:
Necessary but NOT Sufficient
Gleanings
from the Field:
From Vocabulary Exercises to KAT Applications
Notes
about the Centerfold Lesson
Using KAT to Enhance
Literacy, Comprehension & Civic Action
CenterFold
Lesson
Aspects of the Literacy Issue for KAT Study
Adding
to Your Resource Base
BreakOut
Lesson
Literacy for Democray
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A KAT BreakOut LESSON
LITERACY FOR DEMOCRACY
Objectives: Students
will be able to identify situations where advanced literacy/analysis
skills are/have been used to preserve or expand a democratic
system of self-governance, and explain the relevance of these
skills to their freedom and way of life.
Skills:
- Reading for Meaning
- Inquiry-based Research
- Critical thinking
- Creative applications
Curriculum Standards:
This lesson supports numerous curriculum standards in the
areas of language arts (reading comprehension, research,
writing and/or oral expression), and history, civics and
other social studies. Depending on specific examples studied,
there may also be serious treatment of the roles of science
and mathematics in society.
Materials:
A variety of possibilities could be used, depending on student
level/curricular focus. Materials might include any of the
following, among others:
- Pertinent news
articles (teachers can maintain ongoing folders categorized
by topics of interest)
- Legislation/statutes
relevant to children – such
as a copy of a state school code requiring youngsters of
certain ages to attend school, or license their dogs, or
wear bicycle helmets, or become vaccinated…. (Use
primary sources as much as possible. Legislative offices
and reference librarians can be helpful on this.)
- Political
Platform statements, or Position Papers, or Documents/books
like Mein Kampf (Hitler), or other declarations of ideology
- Controversial
Court Cases (Good source of student materials: Constitutional
Rights Foundation: www.crf-usa.org)
- Ballots and
ballot questions (Use primary sources, when possible. Sample
ballots should be available in newspapers or from your
county election board.)
- Advertising
(particularly those with fine print caveats)
- Stories that
highlight prohibitions against educating slaves in America
during the 1800s, and tracing the expansion of human rights
with the expansion of education/literacy.
- Stories of immigrant
groups whose efforts to become literate in their adopted
society provided stability and upward mobility
- Ethical debates
on aspects of science/health (cloning, assisted suicide,
insurance for risky personal behaviors, etc.) or on issues
when private rights conflict with perspectives of public
interests.
- Articles about
censorship (Good source: New Jersey State Bar Foundation:
Students’ Corner www.njsbf.com)
Engage:
Ask
students if their freedom could ever depend on their ability
to read carefully and think about information analytically.
Ask them for examples of where
being highly literate gives people more freedom than people
who have poor literacy skills.
Ask
students why they think there were prohibitions against teaching
slaves in the U.S. to read during the 1800s.
Explain:
You can explain to your students that according to Philadelphia
Reads (www.phila.gov/philareads ),
85 percent of the children who appear in juvenile court are
behind in their reading skills.
Furthermore, the
overall prison population in the U.S. with literacy skills
below a 9th grade level ranges between 60 –75
percent [from Governor’s Mentoring Initiative, Florida
(www.flamentoring.org)
and from California State Polytechnic University (www.csupomona.edu)]
Studies
show that repeat offenses (recidivism) declines as literacy
increases.
Discuss
the implications of these statistics.
Explore:
President Bush
made these comments in a radio address on April 21, 2001: “The
forces of democracy in our hemisphere are strong, but they
are threatened by poverty and illiteracy…So,
at this Summit we are discussing a very practical agenda to
strengthen democracy. We must tear down the barriers of ignorance
and illiteracy that limit the ambitions of so many children
in our hemisphere, and feed their frustrations.”
Consider and research what literacy has to do with institutions
of democracy OTHER than prison.
Thomas Jefferson
once said, “Information is the currency
of democracy.” What does this mean in terms of our actions?
Similarly, the Episcopal Conference of Angola and Sao-Tome
in Angola declared on October 15, 2003 that illiteracy is one
of the main obstacles to the construction of democracy in many
countries.
Frederick Douglass
was a Maryland-born slave turned abolitionist. His drive
for literacy and education in many ways reflected his struggle
- and his people’s struggle – for
freedom. ( see www.ggw.org/freenet/f/fdm/backgrnd.html and www.history.rochester.edu/class/douglass )
How does poor literacy impede democracy?
Extend:
Read (or
become familiar with) the arguments in the Federalist Papers
and/or by Charles Bahmueller (www.civnet.org/journal/issue1/bahm2.htm )
about the importance of “pluralism” (an old-fashioned
term suggesting diversity) and multiple associations in order
to preserve liberty and overcome isolation.
Consider the role of literacy in making this possible.
Evaluate:
Students can be
evaluated by oral or written presentations in which they
are asked how public expenditures on advanced literacy
can be justified. Criteria for differentiating and assessing
their work would be based on the level of substance and documentation
of their arguments.
An alternative
assessment could be to ask the students to write a research
report about the advocacy for an issue of social/political
improvement that relied heavily on skills of literacy. Students
should be able to give several examples of documents, speeches,
legislative proposals, petitions, or other evidence of “tools” used
in the advocacy campaign. (For instance, Martin Luther King’s
I Have A Dream speech is a masterpiece of literary rhetoric,
drawing on several other renown writers. Other examples could
be Thomas Paine’s pamphlets on liberty during the Revolutionary
War; or the roles of Frederick Douglass’ newspapers,
autobiographies or speeches or Harriet Beecher Stowe’s
Uncle Tom’s Cabin in the abolitionist movement; or more
recently, writings such as Rachel Carson’s Silent
Spring as voices in contemporary environmental movements.)
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