Open Classrooms Key to Students’ Civic Development
Penn State Education Policy Studies scholar Ari Kim finds that open classroom climates can help students surmount social inequalities as they develop civic knowledge, attitudes, and behaviors in her January 2026 research article Civic Capital in Uneven and Uncertain Times. The author defines open climates as classrooms where political discussions are encouraged, pluralistic perspectives presented, and respectful debates about current public issues are commonplace.
Kim’s study draws from an international sample of 8th grade students across 15 countries. The author finds that while students bring varying levels of civic capital into schools depending upon their family and socioeconomic backgrounds, classroom interventions can serve as a great equalizer, yielding positive growth in civic knowledge, efficacy, and participation. Moreover, while civic knowledge and efficacy declined over the course of the study, civic participation rose, a product of lowered barriers to entry via technology and changing sociopolitical contexts.
This study has significant implications for practice and policy:
- Given the importance of open classrooms, educators’ professional learning should emphasize strategies for structured engagement with controversial issues and centering student voice.
- As civic engagement assumes increasingly digital forms, information literacy is a core component of students’ civic development.
- Post-pandemic, we must attend to students’ civic knowledge and build a sense of belonging and commitment to the common good. Pedagogical strategies like those detailed above and throughout the Roadmap to Educating for American Democracy should become the new norm.
AI Corner
The 2026 AI Index Report from the Stanford Institute for Human-Centered Artificial Intelligence (HAI) highlights a critical gap in civic readiness. While four out of five U.S. students now use generative AI for their schoolwork, only half of middle and high schools have formal AI policies in place. This disparity underscores the urgent need for robust AI literacy in K–12 education. To prepare the next generation for a landscape in which AI is no longer a niche technology, but a fundamental part of the workforce and public discourse, we must move beyond incidental use and toward intentional instruction. By integrating AI literacy into our schools, we empower students to not only navigate these tools effectively but also to understand the ethical implications and societal impacts of the technology shaping their future.
Key Takeaways from the education section of the report:
- The Usage Gap: 80% of students are using AI for research and brainstorming, yet only 6% of teachers report having clear guidance or policies from their districts.
- Global Momentum: National mandates for AI education are rising globally, with countries like China and the United Arab Emirates implementing formal curricula for the 2025–26 school year to ensure national competitiveness.
- Literacy vs. Engineering: There is a global trend of “AI literacy” (understanding and using AI) growing faster than technical “AI engineering” skills, signaling that AI is becoming a universal civic skill rather than just a technical one.
Ultimately, fostering a deep understanding of AI is not just a technical requirement, but a civic necessity, ensuring that students, educators, future voters, and community members can critically evaluate information and participate meaningfully in an increasingly digital democracy.