Former Supreme Court Justice Sandra Day O’Connor once said, “The practice of democracy is not passed down through the gene pool. It must be taught and learned by each new generation.”
Justice O’Connor understood how important it was for our schools to teach civics—the basics of how our democracy works—so young people will be ready and able to actively participate in our system of government. To encourage schools to teach this critical material and to ensure that students have mastered it, we must require high school students to pass a test showing their mastery of civics before they graduate.
In the past few decades, the focus in American high schools has been on other subject areas, with high-stakes testing dominating time and taking resources away from civic education. The effect has been a shocking lack of understanding about how our government works. The 2019 Annenberg Public Policy Center survey found that fewer than 40 percent of Americans could name all three branches of the federal government, and 22 percent couldn’t name a single one. Justice O’Connor called this lack of basic knowledge about civics “a quiet crisis,” and we must address it.