Main Menu

  • Home
  • About Lourdes
  • Academics
  • Activities
  • Admissions
  • Alumnae
  • Athletics
  • Calendar
  • Campus Ministry
  • Course Selection Directory
  • Directory
  • Edline
  • Educational Technology
  • Guidance
  • Honor Societies
  • Institutional Advancement
  • Media Gallery
  • Parents' Guild
  • Student Handbook
  • Summer Camp
  • Tuition & Expenses
Home

Center for Civic Education Visits School

The Center for Civic Education visited the school Oct. 9 to attend an event where representatives from eight countries closely observed the AP Government class.

The representatives, coming from Peru, Panama, Slovakia, Dominican Republic, Czech Republic, Ghana, Bosnia and the United States of America observed the AP Government class, which also participates in a competition known as We the People: the Citizen and the Constitution. Members of the 2008-2009 Constitution team and students from the honors government class also attended the event, which was hosted in the school library. The Center for Civic Education, along with the representatives, visited the school to observe how the class is conducted, as well as the students’ participation in class.

“Many of these countries are fledgling democracies trying to introduce democracy to their own countries,” social studies department Chairperson Mrs. Rosie Heffernan said.

The class, taught by Heffernan, consisted of a lesson on freedom of speech. Heffernan included a PowerPoint presentation in her lesson, and aimed to show students how the first amendment affects people of all ages. The lesson included a study of the Supreme Court case Morse v. Fredrick, and both students and representatives were able to conduct a mock-trial session.

“It’s important to know how the Constitution affects all of us,” Heffernan said. “I wanted to choose a case the students could get excited about.”

The Center for Civic Education sponsors the We the People program, which the school has been competing in since 1991, and has won at the national level four times.
Multiple countries have joined the Center for Civic Education program, in attempt to begin instilling democracy at the classroom level. Many countries have also developed programs similar to We the People.

“We the People is a microcosm of society where students could express their opinions and learn to respect each other,” Heffernan said.

Program Coordinator Mrs. Alexandra Galico organized for the representatives to attend the school.

“These exchanges are important for international and domestic participants; there are general messages that the [representatives] could take back to their countries to promote civic education and learning,” Galico said.

Different countries have been participating in the Center for Civic Education Program since 1994, when Bosnia first joined the program.

“This project can help students understand how their country works and how they could make a difference,” Program Coordinator of the Bosnia chapter Mrs. Larisa Sacirovic said.

To see pictures of the visit, click HERE.

Copyright © 2002-2008 Our Lady of Lourdes Academy • Website Design and Maintenance by AxisTrend