Good
morning, everyone. Welcome to Stayer
Hall and to Millersville University. As
most of you know, Stayer Hall is the home to Millersville’s College of
Education and Human Services. We are
very pleased to be hosting this event today.
I want to
read you a quotation that you have probably heard before. Then I will ask you if you know to whom these
words belong.
"An educated citizenry is a vital requisite for our
survival as a free people."
Who said
these words? (Thomas Jefferson)
Did he
really say them? Maybe not in just this
way. Jeffersonian scholars at Monticello
indicate that this quotation does not appear in any of Jefferson’s writing,
although it certainly captures the essence of his beliefs. It may very well be the case that he spoke
those words or at least words that capture that sentiment.
Scott Turow,
the American author and lawyer, seemed to pick up on Jefferson’s sentiment when
he wrote in 2011,
“Widespread public access to knowledge, like public
education, is one of the pillars of our democracy, a guarantee that we can
maintain a well-informed citizenry.”
And then there is this:
“And so here we are, well
into the 21st century and we realize more than ever the importance
of a strong system of public education as an essential public good. We appreciate how important education is to
our students’ futures and to the future of our society. We understand that if our students are to
succeed as adults in an increasingly diverse global community, we must ensure
strong outcomes in critical thinking, problem solving, collaboration, cultural
consciousness, information literacy, and the ability to communicate
effectively. And we endeavor to ensure
that this work is done within a context of social justice. “
This is a sentiment, it seems to me, all teachers need
to be mindful of, regardless of the subject they teach. But I think these words mean something more
to teachers of social studies. Social
studies teachers, I think you have a special role in all of this.
Teachers who teach (for example) English/language
arts, math, science, and the arts provide their students with knowledge and
skills they need to be well-informed and successful in life.
Social studies teachers also provide important knowledge and skill
bases, to be sure. But they also provide
the framework for all of us to know how possessing all we learn in school in
all those other subjects enables us to participate in our society and in our
democracy. Knowing the other subjects
makes us a well-informed citizenry.
Knowing social studies helps us understand why that is important.
I put it to you that this work has never been more
important than it is right now in our nation’s history, if recent current
events are any indication.
Again, welcome to Stayer Hall. I hope the conference is engaging,
informative, and fun.