Maine Civic Digest: January 2025

Tuesday, January 14, 2025
Allyson Gardner
 
 
Volume 4:1
January 2025

Dear Friend,

As a teacher, this year has been both inspiring and challenging. My city, Waterville, established the second municipal youth council in the state, empowering young people to participate in local government. Some students are craving such opportunities to become more engaged. Simultaneously, I have noticed a concerning and perceptible increase in the number of students discouraged about political processes and institutions, often pessimistic about the value of their opinions or efforts and their own ability to make change in their communities. 

As an educator, this year I have been trying to reconcile these disparate experiences: new local opportunities for civic engagement coupled with heightened apathy. I believe a solution lies in providing more young people today with direct instruction and practice in how to communicate, collaborate, and become educated and empowered to make change on issues of importance to them. 

This month you will find resources about how to have constructive dialogue that moves beyond civil discourse toward productive discourse. Check past issues for numerous resources on this and related topics to better support our youth to engage in creating their future.  

Jessica Graham

Social Studies Teacher

Co-editor, Maine Civic Digest

Waterville, Maine

Take Your Class to the State House! On February 25th, we will be heading to Augusta for a day of learning and connection. 

- Learn how to speak with legislators on the floor.
- Hear from a panel of guest speakers (including Senators and Representatives).
- Join us for tea at the Governor's House! 
Click here to register & for more details. Reach out to allyson@lwvme.org with any questions.

We're hiring high school interns! Applications are open for a paid position on LWVME's Youth Council. The deadline for the spring semester positions is January 19, 2024. Share this link or better yet, post this flyer so students can learn about the opportunity!

Student-Driven Conversation Cafes. This month our youth interns are planning political conversation cafes as a space for folks to connect about issues that impact their lives outside of party politics.

Youth Advocacy Team and Vote16. What would it be like to lower the voting age to 16? A team of young Mainers has proposed a bill for the upcoming legislative session to make it happen!

 

With our focus on teaching students constructive dialogue and civil discourse, we highlight the work of the CanWe? Project, which provides opportunities for high school students to learn and practice the skills of dialogue across political and other differences. The project works with cohorts of student leaders in partner schools across Maine who seek to develop school-wide cultures of civil dialogue and civic engagement. Once a year, participating students from across the state gather for a student-led dialogue. Check out this summary to learn more. 

Mt. Ararat High School is in its second year of the Project. Nine returning students are participating in a shared ELO with a focus on leadership and promoting and sustaining Mt. Ararat’s Can We? programming. Projects in the works include topic discussion activities, facilitator training, podcasts and printed t-shirts. Can We? Project students were instrumental in organizing the well-attended mock election for their school last year.
Maine Academy of Natural Sciences (MeANS) Project student leaders recently put their facilitation training to use by leading peers in a powerful story exchange on their pasts. Leaders also organized a school-wide mock election last November, and focused on reimagining the school's community norms and how to hold each other accountable to embracing MeANS' values of Respect, Responsibility and Community. Read what Director of Curriculum Evan Coleman has to say in their school newsletter and in an Op-Ed in the Portland Press Herald.
Nearly 250 high school students from 14 Can We? Project partner schools recently came together at the Augusta Civic Center for Can We? Connect, a day of student-led dialogue that serves as a collective retreat in the school year. NEWS CENTER Maine crafted this story. 

In future editions, we look forward to sharing more from schools and the CanWe? Project on efforts to promote constructive dialogue. Let us know if you have something to share!
 
“Constructive dialogue is a form of conversation in which people who have different values, beliefs and perspectives seek to build new ways to understand and interact with each other, even as they sustain commitments to their own principles and perspectives (Constructive Dialogue Institute)”.
 
This month we are featuring information on how teachers can help students learn to have conversations on difficult topics. Rather than avoid important topics, students and teachers can use these resources to develop the skills to improve communication, better understand diverse opinions and do so in a civil manner.

CLASSROOM RESOURCES

  • The Constructive Dialogue Institute offers high school teachers multiple resources and tools to help students develop skills to hold conversations on challenging topics. As an example, check out this brief activity to prepare students to have a constructive dialogue.
  • Share and discuss this brief video from the Better Arguments Project and talk through the five principles to have a better argument. 
  • Check out this guide and numerous resources from the Civil Discourse Project that can be useful for both teachers and students.  
  • Support your students to participate in the KQED Youth Media Challenge to share podcasts and journalism with a national audience. Check out the 25 past submissions from Maine as examples to share with your students! 
  • Encourage your students to join in the annual Margaret Chase Smith Essay Contest, an annual contest with prizes from the Margaret Chase Smith Library for Maine students.  

PROFESSIONAL DEVELOPMENT

 

Each month we will share findings from reputable sources on youth voting and civic engagement across the country and in Maine. 

This month our focus is on the status of civic empowerment among today’s youth based on data from the YouthTruth Civic Empowerment Project. The September 2024 survey showed the majority of high school students wanted to help others and work across differences to improve society, but less than a third reported they had helped change things for the better (Youth Today, 2024). Educators can help address this gap by providing the critical missing civic skills needed for students to feel empowered and turn their intentions into actions.

Start a Conversation in your Classroom! 

  1. Rapidly generate a list of issues students feel they would want to improve in their school, their community and beyond.
  2. What barriers do they feel get in the way of their working to create the change they feel is needed.
  3. Using the activities in this guidebook, help students become inspired to become more involved.
 
We believe the promotion of democracy relies on organizations with similar goals working together to share ideas and resources. Each month we share opportunities for young people from LWVME and other great organizations. Download this PDF to print out and share with your students. 

We're hiring high school interns! Applications are open for a paid position on LWVME's Youth Council. The deadline for the spring semester positions is January 19th. Share this link or better yet, post this flyer so students can learn about the opportunity!


Maine Youth Power works with coalition partners, aligned organizations, and legislative allies to drive grassroots support for legislation impacting young Mainers' lives. If you’re excited to learn and work in the legislative session,, this might just be the role for you!  Applications due January 16th
America 250 is holding a writing or original artwork competition on “What does America Mean to You”. Open to grades 3-12, work can be done as a group project or on your own with a really cool field trip as the prize. The deadline to apply is April 16th. Learn more here.
 Margaret Chase Smith Essay Contest is an opportunity for students to think deeply about Freedom of Speech and how it promotes (and provides challenges for) civil and productive discourse. Prizes are $1000 for first place, $500 for second place, $250 for third place, and five $50 honorable mention prizes. Learn more here.
Kidizenship is an exciting new program that organizes competitions every few months aimed at merging civic action and creative self-expression. Winners of contests such as “Sing Your Anthem” and “Make Your Speech” can also win cash prizes up to $1,000. Learn more here.
 
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