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The Long-Term Impact of Learning to Deliberate

Christy Buchanan Katy Harriger Jill McMillan Stephanie Gusler

9781945577055
87 pages
Kettering Foundation Press
Overview
This report is a follow-up to Harriger and McMillan's Speaking of Politics: Preparing College Students for Democratic Citizenship through Deliberative Dialogue (Kettering Foundation Press, 2007). That book described a four-year study at Wake Forest University in which students, called Democracy Fellows, were exposed to the process of deliberative dialogue both inside and outside of the classroom.

The focus of this report is an alumni study of the Democracy Fellows 10 years after their graduation. For purposes of comparison, they are matched with a class cohort that did not participate in the Democracy Fellows study. The authors describe differences in the ways that the Democracy Fellows and their classmates understand citizenship. They found that the Democracy Fellows have a more "complex and nuanced understanding of citizenship and its responsibilities." Ten years on, they are more likely to be politically active and express more eagerness "to engage with people who hold different beliefs." Their classmates' concepts of citizenship are "more legalistic and less complex than those of the Democracy Fellows."

The authors of this follow-up study bring together research insights from the literature on political socialization, political participation, and deliberative democracy, with a particular focus on whether and how interventions during the college experience might shape subsequent civic engagement. Their work demonstrates the enduring impact of learning to deliberate.
Author Bio
Christy M. Buchanan, who received her PhD at the University of Michigan in 1988, is a professor of psychology and senior associate dean for academic advising at Wake Forest University. Her administrative responsibilities include the orientation of new students and academic support for undergraduates. Katy J. Harriger, who received her PhD from the University of Connecticut in 1987, is professor and chair in the Department of Politics and International Affairs at Wake Forest University, in Winston-Salem, North Carolina. Her research and teaching interests focus on the civic engagement of young people, American politics, and constitutional law. In 2007, she coauthored with Jill J. McMillan, Speaking of Politics: Preparing College Students for Democratic Citizenship through Deliberative Dialogue (Kettering Foundation Press). Jill J. McMillan is professor emerita of communication and research professor at Wake Forest University. Her teaching and research have focused on numerous aspects of communication and rhetoric in and around organizations and institutions: corporate identity; the strategies and impact of an organization's public messages; communicative dysfunction among organizational members and groups; organizational democracy and decision making; and pedagogy in higher education. She received her Ph.D. from the University of Texas in 1982. Stephanie Gusler, is a doctoral student in child psychology at the University of Kansas and the director of programming for the university's PAIR (Preschoolers' Adjustment and Intergenerational Risk) Program. She received her Masters degree from Wake Forest University in 2015.