Simple Sweets

It’s Your Civic(s) Duty

It’s Ann here today. Andy is in OurLittleCorner blogging about pinball and a pirate

I’ve been thinking a lot lately about elections and about how you get folks to turn out to vote – and vote intelligently. I’ve been thinking about how a country creates socially-responsible citizens, and I’ve been thinking about the teaching of civics.

Most of us took Civics or American Government in high school, right? According to the Nat’l Education Association (NEA) almost all states require at least a semester of government. Yet it’s obvious to one and all that that course isn’t doing what is needed. According to Pew Research about 44% of the voting-eligible U.S. population didn’t turn out to vote in the enormously-important 2020 Presidential election. Also, according to the Annenberg Public Policy Center of the University of Pennsylvania, in 2021 a bare majority of Americans (56 percent) were able to identify the three branches of government and nearly one in five (20 percent) were unable to identify any.

An alarming statistic

Sandra Day O’Connor in 2009 – when she first retired from the Supreme Court – was concerned that civic education was disappearing from the curricula and when it was taught it was boring. So O’Connor helped start a program called iCivics with the goal of transforming civic education for every student in America with innovative, truly engaging games and resources (according to the iCivics website). In 2018 iCivics formed a coalition called CivXNow, a ” a fast-growing movement of 150+ influential members calling for a civic education revival in America.”

With a little googling I found this 2023 video, “The Functions of Government” sponsored by iCivics. It’s intended for 6 to 11 year olds. I’d love to know your reaction to it.

Using cartoons to teach about government isn’t new. Our son says that Schoolhouse Rock songs were a memorable part of Saturday mornings for all Gen X kids (born between 1965 and 1980) . These short cartoons covered civics, history, economics, math, science, and grammar. While “Conjunction Junction” is a favorite, “I’m Just a Bill” might be the most famous of them.

With a little more googling, searching into ways to teach young people about our government, I came up with a 1950 talk John Kennedy gave to a convention of Massachusetts high school student council members. Kennedy, then a member of the U.S. House of Representatives, would be elected President 10 years later. I’ve posted a couple of his more relevant comments below.

Representative John Kennedy in 1950

“…public schools are expected to develop leaders for a democratic society. Certainly, all of you must recognize an obligation of the most pressing sort to participate in, and to contribute to the life of your country.

I do not mean by that that you should all embark on careers in the executive or legislative branch of our government. But I do mean that you are obligated to participate in, to contribute to the national life at all levels (the underline is mine, not Kennedy’s).

Aye there’s the rub. In 2018 Judy Woodruff from NPR interviewed a group of high school students about the voting problem, and one student suggested that we should all be required to vote. Can you even imagine what our country would be like if voters – with absolutely no idea of the issues or the candidates -legally had to cast a vote?

A few states require students to pass the same test that immigrants must pass to become U.S. citizens. Take a look at the questions from the test here. I actually think it’s an awful test…just rote memorization. Applicants are given 100 questions (with the correct answers) to study – with the caveat that there may be other correct answers but test-takers should use one of the suggested responses. At test time they are given 10 of those 100 pre-determined questions and required to correctly answer six (6!) of them.

So if neither a requirement to pass the immigration test nor requiring voting would seem to insure engaged citizens, what can we do? More funding for the social sciences, perhaps?

In 2022 The American Bar Association posted an informative article, “Momentum Grows for Stronger Civic Education Across States.” That article provides an astounding revelation about school funding: “Civic education has been chronically underfunded, both federally and locally, the federal government invests a mere 5 cents per K–12 student compared to $54 per student for science, technology, engineering, and mathematics (STEM).”

“STEM will get us to Mars. Humanities will help us get along with one another here on earth.”

And with more funding would come the means to create more innovative curricula and better-trained teachers.

According to civxnow.org, “civic education, when done well, produces young people who are more likely to vote; work on community issues; become socially responsible; and feel confident speaking publicly and interacting with elected officials.” I vote that we do everything we can to support equitable, non-partisan civics education!

Now that I’ve got the serious stuff off my mind, I’m thinking about adding more to those trivia-type Citizenship Test questions. One could be “What U.S. president served for 4,422 days (that’s over 12 years)? And who was that President’s 3rd Vice President? And what was the name of that Vice President’s wife? And what year did that Vice President become President?

And the answers are FDR, HARRY S TRUMAN, BESS, and 1945. And here’s a recipe from Bess Truman (who apparently never publicly discussed politics. Did she not have a good high school civics class?).

Bess Truman’s recipe as it appears in the 1948 Congressional Club Cook Book. My grandmother’s notes indicate that there are two additional, identical recipes published in the cookbook – but with different names. The recipe was clearly popular.

It’s Lowkey Mid tbh. Not!

While Andy today in OurLittleCorner writes about aging, I’m thinking about staying cool. And by “cool” I mean young and trendy – not “out of the heat” or “chill.” And by “chill” I mean cold, not laidback. Actually, I’m totally confused about what I mean! Does that come with age? 🙂

This all started after I read this NYTimes article on teenagers’ language. Dare I say “dope” language? After not understanding any of the teens’ expressions being analyzed (“glazed,” “mid,” “sus,” “cringe,” and “based,”) I decided to consult with my most cool besties…my two grandsons, ages 19 and 22. It’s interesting that Moss, our younger hip Santa Cruz grandson, confirms that he uses the words more than Silas, our older hip Brooklyn grandson. Maybe they’re reflecting age differences. But Silas and his Brooklyn roomies did confirm that “dope” was a “with it” kind of word to use.

My exchange with Moss went like this:

Moss and Silas agree that “sus” has “fallen off” (whatever that means). According to Silas, “sus is like superrrrr cringey but it’s funny to use in an ironic way.” And Moss had this to say (via text):

AOC. Is she cool – or cringy – when she uses “sus while she plays Among Us?”

Stephen Marche, the author of that Times article (which is entitled “Today’s Teenagers Have Invented a Language Which Captures the World Perfectly”), maintains that today’s slang has been “created for a society that’s characterized, online and off, by collapsing institutions, erosions in trust and a loss of faith in a shared sense of meaning.” I’m not sure I’d agree with his thesis, but I still am intrigued with the words.

After all the confusion caused by my trying to become more hip in my language, I was relieved to find the following comment posted on Marche’s Times article, “Hi, just want to note that the word “cool” has never changed meaning or gone out of use in about 100 years. Maybe it’s the exception to the rule but, hey, it is still the very coolest of all our slang words.”

That’s cool! Whew.

And now onto today’s food (for thought?). Though I may have fixed a lot of lowkey mid meals tbh lately…meals that have been nothing to rave about…neither have they been sub-par or cringe-worthy (amazing when you start writing how many expressions you realize you’re using). But you can rest assured that when you serve this Nut-Glazed Chocolate Sheet Cake the reaction will not be glazed.

LMAO about all of this 🙂

I ❤️ a Colorado Morning Sky

Ann is blogging today.

Sunrise in Aurora, Colorado; 2023

I spent my first 22 years on the Front Range of Colorado – growing up in Fort Collins and then at Colorado College in Colorado Springs. I came back for another 6 years while Andy was in Vietnam and then grad school at Colorado State U, during which time both of our kids were born and I became very aware of what early mornings – baby in tow – looked like. Maybe that’s why when Andy points out a lovely Sonoma sky, I sometimes scoff. I tell him I know breathtaking beauty when I see it – and that’s a Colorado sunrise.

I think it’s those formative years with those amazing sunrises that helped make me a morning person (that plus my genetic makeup). Even as I enter my 9th decade on earth, I still get up at 6 am each morning (well, sometimes it’s 6:15 – and I won’t divulge the time I go to bed!). Andy, in OurLittleCorner, claims he would be a morning person too – if it weren’t for his penchant for reading the NYTimes every morning.  

The Cambridge Dictionary defines a “morning person” this way: someone who feels awake and full of energy in the mornings.

If the photo below makes you think of yourself in the morning, read on! There is help (lots of it) out there on both the benefits of becoming a morning person, as well as how to do it. Good luck!

Cleveland Clinic: How to Become a Morning Person

Psychiatry.org: Are there Mental Health Benefits to Being a Morning Person?

The NYTimes: A (Former) Night Owl’s Guide to Becoming a Morning Person

Fortune: Being a morning person comes with major benefits for your brain and body. 5 ways to become one

I think my favorite suggestion from perusing all of those articles is to “make morning more pleasant.” The Cleveland Clinic suggests “Perhaps a hot cup of coffee, sipped in silence, while you take on the daily crossword puzzle? Maybe eating a healthy breakfast while you read a book? Knowing that something pleasant awaits can help you take that first painful step out of bed. “ As you know from an earlier blog, Andy and I are big fans of the NYTimes Connections puzzle. It can almost always make us smile – even at 6 am!

I have no idea whether the science in this video about Early Birds vs Night Owls is accurate. Whatever. It’s a fun watch – and very cleverly done.

And we’ll conclude not with a Colorado sunset (the “sun setting” seems a wee bit ominous) – but another sunrise – this time over Denver’s Sloan’s Lake – and with a recipe for a little something for you to snack on while you enjoy the view.

Sunrise over Denver’s Sloan’s Lake; 2023

If you want even more recipe ideas to help you enjoy the mornings, the NYTimes offered these up.

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