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Item The Center on Civic Literacy(Office of the Vice Chancellor for Research, 2013-04-05) Kennedy, Sheila; Braun, Erin; Davis, Nichole; Marsala, MichaelThe Center for Civic Literacy at Indiana University–Purdue University Indianapolis was established to address the public deficit in constitutional and civic knowledge. It will be the nation’s first research center devoted to studying what our citizens do and do not know about their representative republic. Self-government in a democratic state requires a civically educated citizenry. There is ample evidence that Americans, on average, are civically illiterate. Only 36 percent of Americans can correctly name the three branches of government (Annenberg Public Policy Center, 2007). Fewer than half of 12th grade students can describe the meaning of federalism (NAEP, 2006). Newsweek recently asked 1,000 U.S. citizens to take the official citizenship test; seventy-three percent couldn’t say why we fought the Cold War, 44 percent were unable to define the Bill of Rights, and 94 percent were unable to list the correct number of Constitutional amendments (Romano, 2011). Surveys such as these, as well as the few formal studies that have been completed on civics, point to an alarming “civics recession” (Quigley, 2011). Annenberg Public Policy Center. 2007. “Annenberg Public Policy Center Judicial Survey.” http://www.annenbergpublicpolicy.org/Downloads/20071017_JudicialSurvey/Survey_Questions_10-17-2007.pdf (May 30, 2011). National Assessment of Educational Progress. 2006. “NAEP – Civics 2006: The Nation’s Report Card.” http://nationsreportcare.gov/civics_2006/ (May 30, 2011) Romano, Andrew. “How Dumb Are We?” The Daily Beast. Newsweek/Daily Beast, 20 Mar. 2011. Web. http://www.thedailybeast.com/newsweek/2011/03/20/how-dumb-are-we.html Quigley, Charles. “National Assessment Governing Board – Newsroom – Press Releases –2010 NAEP Civics Report – Charles N. Quigley’s Statement.” National Assessment Governing Board. Web. 27 Mar. 2012. http://www.nagb.org/civics/statement-quigley.htm The Center for Civic Literacy’s poster presentation highlights three things: 1. The current deficit in research and understanding of civic literacy 2. The intersection of civic literacy and civic engagement 3. The research agenda devised through our potential partnerships and National Advisory CommitteeItem The "Civic-Minded Graduate" Construct for Assessing Civic Outcomes(2016-03-21) Hatcher, Julie A.; Bringle, Robert G.Item NEWS AND CIVIC LITERACY;WHAT’S THE CONNECTION?(Office of the Vice Chancellor for Research, 2015-04-17) Fields, Whitney; Thelin, Rachel; Suess Kennedy, SheilaThe Center for Civic Literacy (CCL) at IUPUI is a Signature Center Grant recipient. CCL is a multi-disciplinary research center established to examine the causes and dimensions of Americans’ low levels of civic knowledge, and to investigate the consequences of personal, social, and political civic ignorance. CCL takes an interdisciplinary approach to understanding the causes and effects of deficits in civic literacy, while also examining best practices that combat civic deficits across sectors of society, including public affairs, science, education, business, and healthcare. The latest project from the center investigates how low levels of civic and news literacy intersect; what’s the connection and why does it matter? A study from America University states, “news habits tend to be formed early; if young people turn away from the news, it may lead to a less informed citizenry and make it less likely that there will be a critical mass of news consumers to sustain the high-quality journalism and information production crucial to a healthy democracy” (Hayes, 2014, p.222). The center is currently gathering such research to make the case for an IPS program in high schools which would teach both news and civic literacy.