In the article published by Jeffery
(2002), titled Civic Education and Changing Definitions of American Identity,
1900 – 1950. The author provides insight explanation on the role of civic
education and political leaders in changing or redefining the American identity
during the nineteenth century (1900 – 1950). The American identity has been
challenged by the large influx or presence of millions of immigrants that
entered the United States in the early century. To address or tackle these
challenges (changing American identities), a group of people who advocate
cultural or racial integration demanded that immigrants should shed or ignore
their ethnic identities totally while the cultural pluralists stress that
immigrants should maintain their ethnic roots. To redefine the American
identity, the public school through civic education plays a key role in
achieving it because the schools created programs or subjects for Americanize
immigrant children, intending to blend their ethnic and American identities.
The article further explained that
civic education was introduced during World War II and Great Depression, and it
plays a crucial role in the process as it helps students redefine American
identity as a commitment to general civic ideals.
The author stresses the role or
importance of civic and ethnic nationalism in changing or explaining the
change. The two terms are different from one another. Ethnic nationalism
highlights the role of ethnicity or ethnic group in influencing a nation’s
interest, law, or principles, while civic nationalism is influenced by the
democratic process by its citizens. The cultural interest and principles of a
nation are determined or influenced by its citizens through a democratic
process.
However, the article further
explains that it is difficult to achieve American identity changes using ethnic
nationalism only because people of a nation are always bound together by
descent or blood. The case of Nazi Germany is a vivid example. This is the
reason why civic nationalism is seen as an alternative method or approach to
changing definitions of American identity because it ignores the influence of
gender, race, language, creed, ethnicity, or color as it only places value on
having a society of equal right-bearing citizens that are united in patriotic
attachment and share similar political values and practices. Having achieved
the changing definitions of American identity through civic education between
1900 – 1950, the United States remains the largest nation built on civic
nationalism ideology.
Another major point highlighted in
the article was the fact that it is difficult to practice the terms civic and
ethnic nationalism in the real world as they do in scholars’ minds. The civic
education was used to change the assimilation group; this is a group of the
minority that are accepted into the larger nation only after they have decided
to give up most of their previous ethnic heritage. Another group of people that
civic education changed their ideology is the cultural pluralism group. This group
of people accepted most elements of the larger culture such as political
ideology and language. Although, this group still maintain their ethnic
heritage.
The educational policymakers and political leaders use the content and form of civic education to influence different groups in order to achieve their goal of changing the American identity. Through civic education, they instill the ideas, behaviors, and values that children will have as adults. This also help reshape the outside and ordinary people's ideas which also helped redefine American identity.

Thanks for the summary of this article which helps to interpret from a different perspective the role public schools played in shaping citizens and the nation from 1900-1950. While national and world events (Depression, World War I and II) also helped shape life and schools in this time period, schools played a major role in how to bring together people from many ethnic and cultural backgrounds in one nation with shared civic values and responsibilities.
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