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Explore the study of rights and duties of citizens, citizenship acquisition processes, diversity, and factors that unify America. Gain insights on legal aliens, civic literacy, and the importance of digital citizenship. Understand how to become a US citizen and the significance of global competence. Enhance your knowledge of American values, institutions, and the ever-evolving landscape of the nation.
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What is civics? • Civics is the study of the rights and duties of citizens. • Rights-privileges guaranteed by the U.S. Constitution. • Duties-things you are required to do by law.
Who Are American Citizens? • born in the 50 states or the territories (Puerto Rico, Guam, U.S. Virgin Islands, or the American Samoa) • born to a U.S. citizen (May have dual citizenship) • Anyone who has successfully completed the naturalization process
A Diverse America • USA = a nation of immigrants • Forced immigration = Slaves • “Salad Bowl” Theory
A Changing America • America has experienced many different migrations- a mass movement of people within the country • From farms to the industrial jobs of the cities (mid 1800s) • African-Americans moving from the South to the North after the Civil War (late 1800s) • From Cities to suburbs (1950s to present)
A “More-changing” America • Manufacturing economy to a SERVICE economy • The average age of Americans is climbing and people are having fewer children • Record number of Americans are going to college
What Brings America Together? • American values (freedom, justice, equality, respect, tolerance) • A common language (English) • Traditional American Institutions: -Family -Religion -Education -Social -Government
Aliens In America • Limits on immigration • ~675,000 accepted • Priority: relatives already here & special skills
Legal Aliens • Here from another country…with permission • Why USA??? • Jobs • schools • Function like “citizen” with limitations • Must pay taxes
Legal Aliens vs. American Citizens • Legal Aliens: • Can’t vote or run for office • No jury duty • Can’t hold government jobs • Must always carry an identification card to prove their legal status (green card)
Illegal Aliens • ~5 to 6 million people per year enter illegally • Most risk capture and terrible conditions to sneak across the border • Seek a better life • Illegal to hire • Face deportation
How to become a Citizen? • (Right of Blood) • One parent is a U.S. Citizen, birthplace does not matter • (Right of Birthplace) • If child is born in the U.S., even if parents are illegal immigrants • Naturalization • 18 years old • Permanent U.S. residency for 5 years, or if married to a U.S. citizen, 3 years • Good moral character • Read, write, speak English (some exceptions for Senior adults) • Citizenship test • Oath of Allegiance
File Application for citizenship Pass Citizenship Exam Declaration of Intention Pledge OATH to USA INS Interview STEPS to NATURALIZATION File With INS
Global Engagement • A GLOBALLY COMPETENT CITIZEN CAN… • Investigates the world; understands about other cultures and nations; seeks to learn other languages • Weighs different perspectives; makes informed decisions in diverse groups • Communicates ideas respectfully and effectively • Takes action; makes a difference in your community, state, country, around the world • Applies disciplinary knowledge of the Social Sciences; makes positive interactions in society through people, projects, academic studies, challenges, and research in areas of professional practices.
Digital Citizenship A digital citizen can: • Understands how to stay safe online • Knows how to find, evaluate, manage, and create digital content • Understands how to participate responsibly in online communities • Understands their rights in a digital world
Civic Literacy • A citizen has an understanding of their government and how it works: • Understands government processes and the local and global implications of civic issues. • Knows how to exercise the rights and obligations of citizenship at the local, state and national levels • Stays informed • Participates effectively in civic life