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Liam McLaughlin

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Why Politics Should Be Taught at School

Posted: 16/02/2012 00:00

When a 16-year-old boy named William Hague spoke in front of the Conservative Party national conference in 1977, he drew huge applause and acclaim. Here was a sign of the future for the Tories - a politically engaged teenager who was willing to fight Labour even after many of the MPs listening had retired.

Young people like Hague, or the 16-year-old Rory Weal who spoke at last year's Labour Party conference, are rare though. In fact, it was recently found that more 18-year-olds in the UK have a Facebook account than are registered to vote. Indeed, according to Experian, more than a million 18-year-olds are signed up to Facebook compared to only 520 000 on the electoral role.

Though the 2010 election saw a 7% increase in 18-24 year-old votes compared to 2005, this still put their turnout at a dismal 44% - the lowest of any age group, and 10% lower than the marginally less apathetic 25-34 year-olds, whose turnout was a mediocre 55%.

It's not that young people are completely disengaged. The student protests in late 2010 showed that across class and race there are many young people who are willing to challenge unfavourable government decisions. There are many more who take part in grassroots work for political parties, or keep up with current affairs. The Experian findings, though, show that there is still a large amount of young people in the UK who neither know nor care about politics.

Firstly, the distinction between knowing about politics and caring about politics should be made. No one should be forced to care about a group of wealthy people guffawing at each other in Westminster. But knowing why you do or don't care about them is important. The fact that a lot of young people aren't really sure why they find politics boring and its practitioners repellent is a worrying sign. Even worse is that people who do take an interest in politics are failed by politicians, who still haven't made any moves to teach politics in schools.

At the moment there is no option to study for a GCSE in politics, while A-level politics is discretionary, if it is offered at all. Granted, there are GCSEs in subjects called Citizenship and Social Sciences, but these are broad and are rarely offered by schools. There have been few serious debates about teaching politics in schools, although some initiatives have gained the support of prominent MPs. Nonetheless, this situation leaves British teenagers with no real understanding of how society works and what their role is within it.

All schools should start teaching politics from Year Nine, which would ensure that pupils are mature enough, and have enough background knowledge to begin its study. It should then be a compulsory GCSE which would mean that if it is dropped for A-level, that each pupil at least has enough grounding to inform their future decisions of whether to vote, and basic opinions on policy.

The syllabus should begin with the basics: the Westminster model of government, and the differences between ideologies. It could then go on to look at such subjects as political philosophy, political history, the media, and international politics, while always keeping an eye on how these themes relate to current affairs.

A compulsory GCSE in politics is important because the ability to engage with many aspects of society assumes a certain level of knowledge which many young people don't have. Consider the use of buzzwords with no explanation such as 'the deficit', 'the alternative vote', 'Quantitative Easing', or 'monetary policy'. While these things may be boring, they all form an important part of politics and should be understood. Government accountability (perhaps itself another buzzword!) also relies on citizen engagement and understanding. If the majority of people don't know how to evaluate and critique government policy, governments will continue to walk over their voters. It is in the UK's best interests that politics at school is mandatory.

 

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11:09 PM on 03/06/2012
You make a good point - but remember that politics cannot be divorced from economics today, if it ever could be. I would argue for political economy to be the subject studied by da yoof. Not economics separately mind, because of course there's no such thing as pure economics either.
04:15 PM on 02/23/2012
The best way for children to learn politics is through objective and unbiased history lessons. It might also be desirable to teach them how to read a balance sheet so that later on in life they can recognise when a government is pouring their money down the drain.
05:39 PM on 02/16/2012
The elephant is the room is that politicians and their parties are increasingly distrusted. see http://www.theprogressivemind.info/?p=50907

The survey carried out by the Office for National Statistics shows that only 13 percent of people trust politicians to tell the truth, down from 21 percent, while 82 percent think they do not tell the truth, up from 73 percent last year, British media reported.
.. with only 9 percent of adults over 15 saying they “tend to trust” political parties by autumn 2009, compared to 18 percent a year earlier.

No doubt trust is lower still today. What is the point in being interested in politics unless you are interested in becoming a politician as the only beneficiaries are politicians? Politicians are disinterested in what the public want,preferring to follow their politically correct dreams of a future for us that the public frankly does not want and have zero interest in our dreams.

The public never wanted mass immigration or massive public sector projects that only deliver tax increases for a our children and grandchildren. The public have no interest in the UK becoming involved in any US wars going as none of these do anything for the public. All they do is feed the conceit of politicians.

Children pick up on parents so teaching politics in school is flogging a dead horse. I haven't met anybody with a good word to say about politicians for years and years.
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Kevin Mcilroy
02:07 PM on 02/16/2012
To some extent yes, everyone should understand how the state works etc but we should NEVER teach politics... one of the main reasons we have such a disillusioned youth is because we have too many professional politicians who have absolutely no understanding of what life is like in the real world.

I'm 55 and have absolutely no respect for politicians so why should a "stroppy teenager".

If we had politicians who had proved themselves in society by earning a living or earning respect from the local community rather than party selected yes-(wo)men then I think you would have a chance of some youth engagement
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01:00 PM on 02/16/2012
"Politics Should Be Taught at School"
You may have been told that the UK is a democracy. A democracy is government of the people, by the people, for the people. A republic is government of the people, by a few, for the few. Hand in your fantasy enfranchisement on the way out.
11:29 AM on 02/16/2012
It is damning indictment on modern democratic societies that the very people who are entrusted with propping up successive governments and entrusting them with their mandate have no clear understanding on how their societies are organised.

The concern though is even greater than this at the global level. Our democratic countries are becoming increasingly interwoven with global institutions like the UN, World Bank, IMF, NGOs and global alliances G20, BRICs etc. How on earth do we expect the average citizen to have any meaningful sense of what society is when they can't link the fact that their governments are using these global institutions against there own interests in many cases.

Every citizen needs and adequate understanding of

- How ones country is organised politically
- What ones rights and obligations are within that system
- How that political structure relates fundamentally to that country's economic institutions - Banks, Central Bank etc and why that is important.
- Economics as it relates to managing a country i.e Inflation, Debt
- The unseen influence of power, money and lobbying and the impact that has on subverting political processes both in ones country and globally
- Globalism as a concept and the impact that has locally and globally
- A countrys obligations to the international community
- The extremely important role of media, internet and press in a country and the importance of ensuring that role is not compromised by powerful economic interests
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GingerlyColors
No will to change it, no right to criticize it
10:56 AM on 02/16/2012
While children shouldn't be indoctrinated with political views, regardless of whether they are right-wing or politically correct, they should be made aware of the role that politics play in our society. Everything we do is controlled by politiics, even just going for a walk in the countryside where politics control our access to footpaths and rights of way. Children should be made aware of how taxes are raised and how the money is redistributed in order to pay for the school that they are in, council services, health care, benefits and so on and the importance of voting and how voting works. Importantly politics should be made interesting like it was during the Thatcher years or fun with the likes of Screaming Lord Sutch.
10:41 AM on 02/16/2012
Couldn't agree more - all citizens should be fully prepared to engage in politics at the latest by age-18. Personally I would advocate a couple of classes on the basics I.e. the WestMinster system, definitions of politics and then confront most other topics, as far as possible, such as the political philosophies, UN, EU, international topics with real life examples from th media that week.
08:07 AM on 02/16/2012
Hear hear! and the UK is not the only country that would benefit from teaching politics at school! Great article, thanks.
11:00 PM on 02/15/2012
And what you learn in politics classes has much broader benefits for students as well e.g. learning how to to balance different perspectives on the same issue and debating skills.