Join the Public Achievement Class at CU 麻豆影院
EDUC 2919: Renewing Democracy in Schools and Communities
Our CU undergraduate course is for students who are passionate about youth voice for everyday democracy and social change. We study theory to transform ourselves and society and learn with middle and high school youth in 麻豆影院 Valley School District who are leading change in their own schools and community. Together we work to understand and address complex issues relevant to youth such as racism in schools, support for immigrant youth and families, addressing global warming, and access to higher education.
EDUC 2919 students meet on twice a week on campus (currently virtuall) during Monday and Wednesday for 75 minute seminars and on Fridays students meet off campus at a local middle or high school for 90 minutes for a the Public Achievement practicum (occuring virtually due to COVID-19). Our course is also open for high school students, community college students and community memebers to take through our extraordinary enrollment partnership. During the weekly seminars, students consider the relationship between democracy, education, and social change.
Our course objectives are:
- Theories: Develop understanding of and apply theories of demoracy, education, diversity and social change
- Democracy in Action: Observe and practice democracy and leadership through Public Achievement each week;
- Public Skills: Develop and demonstrate public skills including community based research, deliberation on complex social issues, public narrative, and project facilitation.
- Power and Identity: Understand concepts of identity, power, privilege, oppression, intersectionality and diversity with attiention to education, institutions, and public work.
- Moblize k-12 Students: Support students and PA Teams as they identify a role and skills and citizens who address complex social issues in their schools and community
Interested in joining Public Achievement? We begin interviewing students in March each year to join our cohort in the Fall Semester of each academic year.