Press & Blogs
Radio - Discussion: Why Tech Isn’t Warping Your Kids Brain
Minnesota Public Radio
Amanda Lenhart, associate director of research at Pew Research Center, and Joseph Kahne, chair of the MacArthur Foundation's YPP Network join Minnesota Public Radio (MPR) host Kerri Miller to discuss young people's use of technology.
Why Civics Is About More Than Citizenship
The Atlantic
Will a mandatory citizenship exam make youth better citizens? Joseph Kahne shares thoughts on civic education.
Can Students Click Their Way to a Better World?
Slate
Technology could help young people learn civics lessons, and use them, too.
Why Are We Teaching Democracy Like a Game Show?
Education Week
Suppose a legislature passed a law that made it a graduation requirement to know the name of the town in which Shakespeare was born.
The Nuts and Bolts of Digital Civic Imagination
by Christina Evans
I grew up in Oakland when the Black Panthers were setting up free lunches and breakfasts for me and my classmates in Oakland public schools and carrying guns to defend themselves and their community from the Oakland police.
Survey: Young adults want news every day
Associated Press
A survey conducted by The Associated Press-NORC Center for Public Affairs Research and the American Press Institute finds that young adults are staying more engaged with the world through mobile devices and social networking than previously thought.
Civics Instruction Moves Up in Class
Wall Street Journal
After years on the back burner of the nation’s educational agenda, civics is making a comeback, with a number of states mandating new classes or assessments and a burgeoning national push for high-school seniors to pass the exam required of new citizens.
Why getting kids 'college and career ready' isn't enough
by Joseph Kahne
Joe Kahne makes the case for the importance of civic education in the Washington Post's Answer Sheet. He argues that the way to revitalize our democracy is to provide supports and opportunities for youth to connect to the issues they care about in informed and effective ways.
Why getting kids 'college and career ready' isn't enough
by Joseph Kahne
Joe Kahne makes the case for the importance of civic education in the Washington Post's Answer Sheet.
Podcast - Report: California Schools Fall Short on Civics Education
KQED
Forum with Michael Krasny, Host Mina Kim with guests Young Whan Choi, David Gordon, Joe Kahne, Robin Mencher.
Should Graduation Speakers Talk About Improving the World?
by Joseph Kahne
Since graduation speeches frequently remind youth to draw on their talents to make their communities and the world a better place, why aren't students asked to focus on this more during high school?
Op-Ed - Technology can help get kids “community ready”
by Ellen Middaugh and Joseph Kahne
This fall, as more than 8,000 young people return to Oakland Unified School District high schools, we are reminded that the future of our communities rests in the hands of these students.
Election 2012: Oakland schools get out the youth vote
Mercury News
This week, a group of boisterous teenagers marched down to a ballot box a few blocks from their school.
Op-Ed - If Teachers Moderated Presidential Debates
by Joseph Kahne
Could we please have teachers moderate the debates? They might not be perfect, but they would be better.
Podcast - Youth Using Social Network Tools to Participate in Politics
KQED
Nearly 17 million young people will be newly eligible to vote this November. A new study of how these voters engage in politics online shows that they may be listening more carefully than politicians think.
The Revolution Will Be Digitized: Black Youth and Digital Social Capital
Ebony
Mark Anthony Neal looks at how technology and social media are empowering and creating young activists...
Political Pioneers or Bed Texters
by Joseph Kahne and Cathy Cohen
When it comes to technology, young people, and politics, youth are characterized as either having started the Arab Spring with only their cell phones or...
Young people taking part in politics via new media, but they want help telling fact from fiction
San Jose Mercury News
Young people are sharing information and engaging in politics and policy discussions online like never before, according to a new study co-authored by an East Bay professor.
In Advance of 2012 Election, National Survey Finds Young People Are Using New Media for Peer-based Participatory Politics
Youth and Participatory Politics Research Network
The MacArthur Research Network on Youth and Participatory Politics (YPP), under the direction of co-principal investigators Cathy J. Cohen of the University of Chicago and Joseph Kahne of Mills College, today unveiled the findings of the largest nationally representative study to date of new media and politics among young people.
Youth Politics: Social Media Use Bridges Race, Ethnic Divides: University of Chicago Survey
Chicago Sun-Times
The University of Chicago released a new study, "Participatory Politics: New Media and Youth Political Action," which concludes that for the 15-to-25 year old age group...