Take Home Skill: Growing Civic Empowerment
Parents/caregivers and their teens discuss issues in their community and in the world, and think together about how they can make an impact.
Parents/caregivers and their teens discuss issues in their community and in the world, and think together about how they can make an impact.
Youth will:
Take a moment to reflect on the issues and concerns in your community or the world that you care about. You can use the following prompts to connect your experience with your teen’s experience.
Overview: With all the hustle and bustle in our everyday lives, it can be hard to get together as a family to talk about issues in our community and in our world that we care a lot about. But when we provide space for our teens to talk about civics—our rights and responsibilities as citizens of our local communities and our world–we can help them feel more empowered. Having weekly talks about civics over dinner can be one way to help teens feel inspired about civic engagement and encouraged to take collective action to bridge differences with people in their community who seem different and pursue justice.
Activity: First, introduce the topic of civics and what being a citizen means to you. Talk about it from your point of view and give examples. Explain how it’s important to understand that each individual contributes in different ways in their community. You can take inspiration from and adapt the following prompts using a familiar conversational style that feels natural for you.
Continue the conversation by explaining that part of being a citizen is being able to identify and advocate for issues that may be harming people in your community. For example, you can discuss issues including lack of access to fresh food and vegetables, access to transportation, sanitation, such as having cleaned streets and parks, accessible food pantries, homelessness, clean air, access to community gardens, accessible sidewalks for people with disabilities.
Next, talk about how you can start having family members take turns choosing a civics topic that they want to discuss over dinner over the next week or more. The family member whose turn it is to choose the topic will also lead the family conversation. Family members should rotate, so that everyone gets to lead one of the conversations during the week. If family dinners are not common in your household, you might consider doing this practice as you drive your teen to school, over chores, or simply during the end of the day when you reconnect.
The conversation leader can start by doing a bit of research on the topic beforehand to prepare themselves to engage the family in a discussion. For example, they can spend about five minutes doing research online using credible sources, like Pew Research Center, to learn about facts or figures related to affordable housing to share with the family. The conversation leader can also share their own personal stories or the stories of people they know who are experiencing challenges with affordable housing, for example.
The conversation leader can begin the discussion by taking two to three minutes to share key points about the topic that could include facts and figures as well as personal stories with the family members. If you like, the conversation leader can begin by taking on the role of a “myth-buster” for the topic for the first few minutes before each of the family members chime into the discussion to share their perspectives. It’s especially important to encourage your teen by letting them know their opinion is very important, their voice matters, and that caring for our community is part of being a citizen. The conversation can proceed to explore how, based on your own definition of a citizen, you can advocate for a solution or help to solve the problem. For example, using a familiar conversational style that feels natural for you, your discussion can explore the following questions:
Civic engagement can nurture teen’s well-being by helping them feel a sense of greater control over their lives as they practice being hands-on in their communities. What’s more, it can help them have a more nuanced understanding of civic issues in their community and in the world. This empowerment can be especially important for teens from marginalized backgrounds.
Researchers randomly assigned teens and young adults (18% Hispanic/Latino, 18% Multiracial, 15% East Asian, 11% Black; predominantly of low socioeconomic status) to deliver a short speech on one of two different topics. They were given five minutes to prepare a two- to three-minute speech about either a civic issue (i.e., homelessness) or a neutral issue (i.e., snack foods). Compared to youth who gave a neutral speech, youth who gave a speech about homelessness had a greater sense of civic empowerment—an understanding that their active participation and involvement can make an impact on civic decision-making. What’s more, compared to youth who gave a neutral speech, youth had a lower physiological stress response preparing and delivering their civic speeches as well as during a subsequent math activity designed to induce stress, which suggests that a sense of empowerment acts as a stress buffer.
Facing civic issues can feel overwhelming at times, particularly for teens, but even for adults. Teens may be curious to learn more about issues affecting their community and the world, but they might not know where to start, and doubt their skills and ability to make a difference. At times, if they do get involved in trying to bring change to some social cause, they might be met with resistance and slow progress, which can be discouraging. For this reason, it is important to help our teens stay civically engaged and feel empowered to be active community members and global citizens building a better and just future for all. While civic engagement can be stressful, it can also help teens feel more socially connected, provide practical opportunities to be involved in their communities, and foster their sense of purpose and meaning. This practice can be one way to nurture teens’ civic engagement within the family home and it is easily adaptable to meet unique family needs and interests.
Ballard, P. J., Muscatell, K. A., Hoyt, L. T., Flores, A. J., & Mendes, W. B. (2021). An experimental laboratory examination of the psychological and physiological effects of civic empowerment: A novel methodological approach. Nonprofit and Voluntary Sector Quarterly, 50(1), 118-142.
Christens, B. D., & Peterson, N. A. (2012). The role of empowerment in youth development: A study of sociopolitical control as mediator of ecological systems’ influence on developmental outcomes. Journal of Youth and Adolescence, 41(5), 623–635. https://doi.org/10.1007/S10964-011-9724-9
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