PROJECT
CITIZEN MODEL FOR IMPROVING OPEN CLASSROOM CLIMATE IN CIVIC EDUCATION
BEST PRACTICES
Muhammad
Mona Adha
University
of Lampung
Abstract
Project
Citizen flexible enough to be applied in a variety of situations.
Students and teachers love to use materials project citizen and it is
believed that it will help students learn skills and obtain useful
information and developed the concept of thinking students about
conditions in the surrounding environment. Students and teachers are
convinced that project citizen can develop a greater understanding of
public policy and help students to learn how the government works and
develop the commitment of students to become active citizens. The
primary goal of Project Citizen is to develop
in students a commitment to active citizenship and governance by
providing
the knowledge and skills required for effective
citizenship providing
practical experience designed to foster
a sense of competence and efficacy developing
an understanding of the importance of
citizen participation. The educational outcomes of Project Citizen
are: civic knowledge, civic skill (intellectual and participatory),
and civic disposition (democratic values and principles, reasoned
commitment).
Key
words: Project Citizen, civic competencies, and educational.
INTRODUCTION
The
learning components are basically directed to achieve a goal. Through
it, all efforts of both teachers and students are directed to achieve
the objectives that have been determined. Through learning, then
teachers can understand the purpose and direction of the study
itself, so that through a clear purpose, not only can determine the
steps of learning and the development of other components, but can
also be the criteria of effectiveness of the learning process.
(Slattery, 1995) explains the education profession has also struggled
to remain focused on its primary purpose of learning and instruction
for students. Education is very important or urgent to be aware to
the rapidly changing structure of society and to reassert. (Brownhill
and Smart, 1989: 2) describe that education was an instrument of
social control. It taught respect for one's betters and the
acceptance of authority, and created a population used to discipline.
Therefore
it takes strategy or model of learning which will be used by the
teacher in the classroom learning the civic education with the
concept of portfolio-based learning through practice of citizenship
learning (Project Citizen) which is one of the adaptive model in
civic education revitalization (Winataputra;Budimansyah, 2008: 182)
that can replace the previous learning often known as conventional
learning.
Project
Citizen is carried out to develop (1) an instruction based on
students' needs; (2) students' ability to work together in a
cooperative manner; and (3) civic education related to the social
experience. Project Citizen is one example to develop the ideas in
the world of education and how our students are learning about
cooperation between them in the classroom as opportunities for
improving open classroom climate in civic education best practices
and also character development.
The
Definition and Implementation of Project Citizen Model
Reactive
Teaching. To apply the model of portfolio-based learning, the teacher
needs to create the right strategy in order for students to have a
high learning motivation. That kind of motivation that will be
created when the teacher can convince students about the material
being studied that will be useful for real life. Then, teachers are
also required to be able to create a situation so that the subject
matter presented is always interesting and not boring. In
addition to know further about knowledge of citizenship, project
citizen aims to help the development of a wide range of civic skills
that are important to the life of democracy.
Project
Citizen is also implemented in more than 50 countries including
Indonesia through the Center for Civic Education’s Civitas
International program
developed by the Center for Civic Education (CCE), in the last 15
years it has been adapted around the world. This model is a generic
or general and fundamental that the relevant material can be loaded
in each country. As the model selected generic topic about "public
policy", which is valid in any country. The Mission of this
model is to educate learners in order to be able to analyze the
various dimensions of public policy, then with his capacity as a
"young citizen" or young citizens tried to give input on
the public policy on the environment. The expected results are the
qualities of a citizen that is "intelligent, creative,
participatory, prospective, and responsible.” Center for Civic
Education (2013) explains:
In
democracies, a public policy is a concept or set of ideas that guides
a course of action or a procedure used in dealing with public issues
or problems.
Public
policies are often embodied in laws, rules, or regulations or agreed
upon procedures used by government to fulfill its responsibilities to
protect the rights of the people and to promote the general welfare.
Public policies serve to distribute certain benefits and burdens of
society, manage the allocation of resources, and manage conflicts.
Treating
the young as a civic resource. At present we are not capitalizing on
the natural interest of young adolescents in political and civic
life, nor are we treating them as a civic resource as assets to the
community. Early adolescence is a time when the young want and need
real world experiences. They want to explore the world in which they
live to try on different roles to find out who they are and what they
can do. What better way to provide those experiences than through a
program like Project Citizen in which the young explore the world in
which they actually live their neighborhoods, school, community,
state and local governments, and the associations that constitute
civil society.
Adolescents
get to see for themselves how things work what people say and what
they do what is right and what is wrong in how the institutions of
government operate. They need to see and reflect on their
experiences, because that is how they acquire the knowledge to
develop the skills and summon the will to improve the world in which
they live. (Anggraeni, 2010) The International Baccalaureate
Organization (IBO) describes from international perspective:
1)
Developing citizens of the world in relation to culture, language and
learning to live together; 2) Building and reinforcing students'
sense of identity and cultural awareness; 3) Fostering students'
recognition and development of universal human values; 4) Stimulating
curiosity and inquiry in order to foster a spirit of discovery and
enjoyment of learning; 5) Equipping students with the skills to learn
and acquire knowledge, individually or collaboratively, and to apply
these skills and knowledge accordingly across a broad range of areas;
6) Providing international content while responding to local
requirements and interest; 7) Encouraging diversity and flexibility
in teaching methods; 8) Providing appropriate forms of assessment and
international benchmarking.
The IBO
framework can develop the education and the process of teaching
learning in the classrooms. Start from the environment surrounding
student, news, informations, knowledge, life experience, and many
aspects can combine into one process during the time to discuss or to
analyze the issue. That's why project citizen model is very important
to implement especially to encouraged student. Civic
participation may attract challenges because it requires changes in
how teachers teach, how students learn, and the relationship between
the classroom teacher and the community.
Project
Citizen not only stimulates students' interest in and understanding
of the problems of their own communities, but Project Citizen also
teachers them how to go about trying to solve those problems. It
demonstrates to them that government of, by, and for the people is
not just a slogan. Government of, by, and for the people is
obtainable, if citizens acquire the knowledge, use their skills, and
have the will to effect change.
Introducing
students to public policy-making. A reason for commending Project
Citizen is that there is no better way to introduce students to the
cycle of public policy-making and to inculcate a disposition to take
part in the process. Public policy-making is a dynamic, not a static
process. It is a continuous, never-ending process. Project Citizen
invites students to learn the public policy process by becoming a
part of it. Students "do" public policy-making rather than
just read or hear about it. And the doing is the start of what can
become a life-long disposition towards engaged and empowered
citizenship.
(Civiced,
2013) Branson explains the
four reasons why Project Citizen is an important and well-received
undertaking are these:
- Because the program is tailored to the interests and needs of early adolescents. Programs that engage the interests of the young and allow them to develop the skills of citizenship not only are rare, such programs are desperately needed. As educators and even as parents we often fail to capitalize on the abilities, ideas, and energy of the young. We do not treat the young as the assets the human and civic resources that they are or can be.
- Because our chronic inattention to local and state government has cost us dearly. Our preoccupation with national and even international government makes government seem to be something removed from us and our everyday lives, something about which we need do little. But the problems at home where we live, in our schools, neighborhoods, our villages, towns, and cities, are very real and immediate. As citizens we can bring about changes for the better where we live, if we know how to go about effecting change.
- Because there is no better way to teach the cycle of public policy-making or to demonstrate to young people how they can and why they should take part in the process.
- Because research attests to the effectiveness and worth of Project Citizen.
Through
student participation in project citizen, they will have an
opportunity to develop a range of characters from the citizenship and
democratic society such as the meaning of the values of politics,
political interest, political tolerance, commitment to democratic
citizenship, commitment to civic responsibility, commitment to
constitutionalism, and participation as an active student.
Project
Citizen Model's Six Steps Toward Effective Teaching and Learning
Civic Engagement in the Classroom
The
goal of Project Citizen is to “...give students’ knowledge,
enhance their skills, and deepen their understanding of how “the
people”—all of us—can work together to improve our
communities.” (Virginia Standards of Learning, 2013)
Six
steps of project citizen model:
Step
1: Identifying Public Policy Problems in Your Community
Step
2: Select a Problem
Step
3: Gather Information
Step
4: Developing A Class Portfolio
Step
5: Presenting Your Portfolio
Step
6: Reflecting on Your Learning Experiences
And
project citizen has four panel (group):
Panel
1: The Problem project citizen state
Panel
2: Alternative policies project citizen state
Panel
3: Proposed policy project citizen state
Panel
4: Action plan project citizen state showcase
Best
Practices Civic Education Classroom
Our
learning during this run with verbalistic and oriented only to the
mastery of the content of the subject civic education. As if learning
aims to master the content of these subjects. In the reality we
should study the interconnectedness of learning material with
everyday life, how to solve problems of everyday life, and prior
experience of the student. Civic
Education is an important component of education that cultivates
citizens to participate in the public life of a democracy, to use
their rights and to discharge their responsibilities with the
necessary knowledge and skills.
Citizenship
education aims to embody the citizens understand the rights and
obligations as a Indonesia citizen. The goal is the achievement of
people's lives with the culture of peace, tolerance, nonviolence,
honesty, caring, fairness, legal compliance and upholding the rule of
law, who became the face of the efforts of nation and character
building. Civic education intended to shape learners into human
beings who have a sense of nationality and love the country. As for
the socialization of civic education can be arranged through the
school, the family, mass media, political institutions, and country.
In civic education, students are prepared to think critically,
rational and creative as well as responding to the issues of
citizenship and is responsible for the activities of society.
Civic
education should be an integral part of a globalization and that
global community can help prepare students for citizenship. Malcolm
Waters in Kalidjernih (2010) Globalization has three dimensions:
economics, politics, and cultural. As we know, students are living in
this globalization era. Many of social problems they can observe
surrounding them. (Bakrie, 2009) Globalization is not monolithic but
it takes with it innovation and technological development. As for the
basic nature of globalization itself, it is the speed of change. It
is this character of globalization that has made a future view become
more unpredictable.
The
learning components are basically directed to achieve a goal. Through
learning and clear objective criteria can be the effectiveness of the
learning process. Learning experience, Gagne in Sanjaya (2008: 27)
explains that
Why do we
speak of instruction rather than teaching?It is because we wish to
describe all of the events that may have a direct effect on the
learning of a human being, not just those set in motion by individual
who is a teacher. Instruction may include events that are generated
by a page of print, by a picture, by a television program, or by
combination of physical objects, among other things. Of course, a
teacher may play an essential role in the arrangement of any of these
events.
Based on
the opinion above be explained that learning is a process of learning
experienced by students. The learning experience of students can also
be obtained from a variety of information such as writings, obtained
from images that are associated with learning materials, and can also
be obtained from broadcast television or an overview of the combined
some physical object where the teacher will give the student
referrals or rules to guide.
Syvertsen
(2007) looks at a range of usual practices that social studies
teachers report using
and assess whether various practices had a demonstrable impact on
targeted civic outcomes for students. The practices which we assess
are common practices and activities that are regularly found in
standard civic education curricula and classrooms.
The
research team created the instructional practice scales based on
theory and the common underlying skill or disposition targeted by the
activity. To get a score on each measure, the number of activities
for which the teacher responded “yes” was summed. The various
instructional practice scales fit under three broad categories which
seek to enhance. Conceptualization
of civic education in terms of three interrelated components. Many
educators throughout the world focus their programs upon the
development of civic knowledge, civic skills, and civic virtues.
Civic
knowledge consists of fundamental ideas and information that learners
must know and use to become effective and responsible citizens of a
democracy.
- Civic skills include the intellectual skills needed to understand, explain, compare, and evaluate principles and practices of government and citizenship. They also include participatory skills that enable citizens to monitor and influence public policies.
- Civic virtues include the traits of character, dispositions, and commitments necessary for the preservation and improvement of democratic governance and citizenship. Examples of civic virtues are respect for the worth and dignity of each person, civility, integrity, self-discipline, tolerance, compassion, and patriotism. Commitments include a dedication to human rights, the common good, equality, and a rule of law.
Civic
education can have a substantial impact on youth civic and political
engagement, some scholars have focused their attention on
understanding how youth who are active and engaged became that way
and, in turn, how schools might incorporate that knowledge to provide
better quality civic education. Civic learning can provide the kinds
of opportunities that allow students to learn and practice a variety
of civic skills, learn about how government works, see how others
engage civically and politically, and grapple with their own roles as
future citizens, then increases in both students’ commitment to and
capacity for future participation.
Civic
learning opportunities may be important later in life especially when
they have to make important decisions about their future and their
relationship to the world. Civic role models, learning about problems
in society, learning about ways to improve one’s community, having
social life experiences, being required to keep up with politics and
government, being engaged in open classroom discussions, and studying
topics about which the student cares, all promoted commitments to
civic participation among students.
Open
Classroom Climate
Classrooms
are
becoming aware of the extent to which schools can contribute to the
competencies that young people require to practice active
citizenship. Openness
of classroom climate is
the measure of a discourse-based or interactive education (IEA,
2013).
If we want the students can learn more actively, the teacher should
bring up the right strategies in motivating students like a message
from IEA
Civic Education studies since the 1970s. It is time for the policy
community to consider what would be needed in teacher training or
other reforms to make classrooms where open and respectful discussion
is encouraged a reality.
Teachers
should facilitate students to get meaningful information, and give
the opportunity to students to invent, implement their own ideas.
Also the students can be more confident and accepting teachers and
others. In open classroom climate students can share their talents,
abilities, skills, and interest. In doing so, students and teachers
can be a stronger, more complete and happier in teaching learning
processed. Involving
classroom activities are essential in helping students learn the
analytic, policy making, evaluative, and participatory skills young
people need to help solve this and other societal problems.
(Classroom
Management Success, 2012) There are three particular features are
present in all successful classrooms. The first key factor is the
quality of the relationships, in other words how much everyone helps
and supports each other. The relationship between teacher and
students is clearly important but relationships between students is
equally important in ensuring a successful classroom climate.
The second
key feature is the personal development of students, and how easy we
make it for them to grow as learners and fulfil their potential.
The third
key factor is the smooth running of the classroom, characterized by
an orderly environment where teacher expectations and standards of
personal behavior and achievement are high and clearly understood by
everyone.
Common
strategies that successful teachers use to build a positive classroom
climate:
- Create a warm classroom environment. To create a warm supportive classroom climate teachers can: show understanding and openness, be friendly, help students, and be principled.
- Another classroom management strategy that promotes a positive classroom climate is enthusiasm on the part of the teacher. The research shows that teachers who consistently send positive messages about the subject being studied do have an influence on how students respond, by motivating students more than teachers who are less enthusiastic. Students never get inspired by teachers who are not enthusiastic, or who create a negative classroom climate.
- High expectations. Teachers with high expectations of students seem to have these things in common: they pay very close attention to the progress their students are making, teachers need to communicate their faith that students will do the best they can within the limits of their abilities, make sure students get useful feedback on their progress, feedback that is honest but constructive and focused on continuous improvement, take great care about how they ask questions in class - they ask high order questions, emphasize good presentation of student work as much as the content, and, crucially. (Classroom Management Success, 2012).
Based on
research by David E. Campbell about open classroom climate, at least
there are some components that support the classroom climate. Among
other things: students
feel free to disagree openly with their teachers about political and
social issues during class, Students are encouraged to make up their
own minds about issues, Teachers respect our opinions and encourage
us to express them during class, Students feel free to express
opinions in class even when their opinions are different from most of
the other students, Teachers encourage us to discuss political or
social issues about which people have different opinions, Teachers
present several sides of an issue when explaining it in class.
(Campbell, 2008).
In
condition class that warmer and open would provide an opportunity to
the students to think positively and focus to the importance of the
issues discussed and can add to the knowledge of students.
We can
further hypothesize that an open classroom climate fosters a
disposition toward being critically engaged. Adolescence and early
adulthood is a period during which many develop a self-identity,
which can include the self-conception of envisioning oneself as an
active participant in the classrooms. We should expect the discussion
of social life issues in the classroom to facilitate the development
of a civic identity which incorporates being a regular participant in
class activity.
Every
discussion in the classrooms activity describes several dilemmas to
use for student prior knowledge, journaling, writing essays, adding
data and information, and/or reflection. The issues usually do not
have one right answer. Instead, they make teacher think. Sometimes
they show a positive character trait “out of balance” with
another positive trait that might have a higher principle.
Lewis
(2005: 2) When the teacher choose issues or dilemmas to consider to
other teachers and especially student, keep these basic guidelines in
mind: 1) As much as possible, clarify the facts and issues first; 2)
If you are exploring these dilemmas with others, do it in safe,
trusting athmosphere where all ideas are accepted; 3) Piggyback on
each other's ideas. Share insights, inspirations, and expertise; 4)
When you lead a discussion of a dilemma, be sure not to take sides or
try to control or influence what other people think and say; 5) It's
okay to disagree, but without criticism , name-calling, insults, or
offensive language. Those are not allowed; 6) Remember that there
often is not only one right answer.
Teachers,
as well as other educators and leaders, must play an important role
in educating students from diverse groups to become effective
citizens in a democratic society. To become thoughtful and active
citizens, students must experience democracy in classrooms and in
schools. Action speaks much more cogently than words. Consequently,
how teachers respond to marginalized students in classroom will to a
great extent determine wheter they will experience democracy or
oppression in classrooms and schools. Banks (1997: 99).
John Holtz
in Silberman (2002: 5) states that learning is getting better if
students are required to do the following things:
- explaining information with their own language
- Give examples
- knew the conditions
- Look at the relationship between one fact or idea with another
- implemented in various ways
- anticipate how consequently
- Reveals the opposite or reverse
A
Good Character for Student
Lickona
attention to values and character development has become a study in
recent years. Lickona focuses on how to apply the values of the
character of a very simple thing that will ultimately deliver a huge
impact in the future for any individual who is able to implement the
values of character itself properly. As an example-a simple example
being propounded by the impact and Lickona gave a very deep
understanding of implementation of character values, “We
don't want them to lie, cheat on tests, take what's not theirs, call
names, hit each other, or be cruel to animals; we do want them to
tell the truth, play fair, be polite, respect their parents and
teachers, do their schoolwork, ad be kind to others.” (1991:
47).
That can
be described, with emphasis on the value of honesty, of course,
students are required to not cheating when working on assignments or
exams, don't take things that aren't right, calling with a good call,
dear friends, and treat animals properly. Thus, it is clear that we
want our learners to be honest (no lie), fairness, courtesy, respect
for parents and teachers, working on school assignments given by the
teacher, and be nice to everyone.
Characters
according to Lickona is divided into several sections that are
contained in it. As expressed by Lickona below:
Character
so conceived has three interrelated parts: moral knowing, moral
feeling, and moral behavior. Good character consists of knowing the
good, desiring the good, and doing the good, habits of the mind,
habits of the heart, and habits of action. All three are necessary
for leading a moral life, all three make up moral maturity. When we
think about the kind of character we want for our children, it's
clear that we want them to be able to judge what is right, care
deeply about what is right, and then do what they believe to be
right, even
in the face of pressure from without and temptation from within.
(1991: 51)
Based
on the opinion of Lickona above can be explained that the character
is made up of three other correlation between knowing moral, moral
feeling, and moral behavior. The character itself consists of, among
other things: know the things that are good, have a desire to do
good, and carry out good last based on the thoughts and feelings,
whether it is good thing to do or not, then done. All three of these
can give you direction or moral good life experience, and give you
maturity in being.
Implementation
of character values like wisdom in choosing which ones are good where
the bad, justice, fortitude, self control, love, gave rise to a
positive attitude, hard work, has a strong self integrity, be
thankful for what we have today (gratitude), and have a sense of
humanity (humility) deserves to be developed and implemented in our
daily life activities. Thus good character can continue to flourish
and realized what the purpose of the future, as well as being able to
generate a positive activities. The development of the value of a
character early on in order to do the absolute values are displayed
when they grow up will be
better
and understand all the differences that exist.
To
define what good citizenship is and what the outcomes of civic
education should be. The definitions of these things acknowledged the
possibility for greater empowerment of young citizens but framed the
notion of citizenship itself in terms of references to the Greeks and
to a classic text on the subject from 1950. There was little notion
that citizenship may have changed in the interim or how new
educational approaches might adapt to changing social identities or
newly emerging learning preferences among recent generations of young
citizens.
CONCLUSION
There
are important reasons to broaden our framework for thinking about
project citizen model:
- Student can understand about the implementation of project citizen model. The social factor in school is the greatest factor of all; it stands higher than subjects of learning, than methods of teaching, or than the teacher. That which children learn from each other in play and works is the highest that is ever learned…This mingling, fusing, and blending give personal power, and make the public school a tremendous force for the upbuilding of democracy. (Patrick)
- Project Citizen is taking part in the program to develop student to be aware about problem surrounding them. The “content” of Project Citizen is much gained from the experiences in fulfilling the class needs. This content reflect upon student experiences. By doing so, the responsibilities of citizens in a democracy can improve, learn about democratic principles, learning something about the importance of civil society, and learning some of the roles and responsibilities of governmental agencies at local or state.
- Providing the knowledge and skills required for effective participation providing practical experience designed to foster a sense of competence and efficacy, and developing and understanding of the importance of citizen participation. The quality and efficacy of civic education in emerging character should be improved in light of the specific contexts where programs are being developed and implemented.
- Project Citizen affords young people an opportunity to learn about their rights and their responsibilities by exploring the political and civic world in which they actually live their neighborhood, school, community, state, and the associations that make up civil society. They are able to see for themselves how issues are put on the public agenda, how public policies are debated, formulated, implemented, and evaluated. They are engaged in research, deliberation, and advocacy. They learn how to work with their fellow citizens and they come to understand that in a democracy solving problems means that citizens must be willing to compromise.
- Teachers should be able to apply the project citizen in the classroom by making use of the existing resources in the school to its full potential. Associated with it, teachers more creative, innovative and able to motivate students interest in applying the project citizen. In this case the government should make collaboration with teachers to develop more serious project citizen, in order to for a good student character.
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