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Ten Things I Wish Political Science Professors Would Teach by former Congressman Lee Hamilton Civic Education and the Common Good by former Congressman Lee Hamilton Video of Jim Coyne and David Minge at Cal State Long Beach
The U. S. Association of Former Members of Congress created
the Congress to Campus Program in an effort to improve college students'
understanding of Congress and American government and to encourage them to
consider careers in public service. Beginning in 1996, the
The program sends
bipartisan pairs of former Members of Congress - one Democrat and one
Republican - to visit college, university and community college campuses
around the country. Over the
course of two days, the former Members conduct classes, hold forums, meet
informally with students and faculty, and do interviews and talk show
appearances with local press and media. The Congress to
Campus program provides a distinctive, powerful and personal means to
educate the next generation about American government, politics and public
affairs. The former Members
provide students with insights into the realities of American democracy
through sharing their real-life experiences as candidates and office
holders. The former Members
also deliver an important message about bipartisan cooperation. Former Members
share their real life experiences of both achievement and occasional
frustration – bringing to life for their young audiences the theory and
the practice of democracy and explaining the often misunderstood ways of
Congress and Washington. They
present a living, bipartisan demonstration of what ought to typify our
representative democracy: decent people with different points of view, who
are able to discuss constructive ways to work through differences to solve
public problems. “This is a story
of government and politics - positive but not unblemished - told in the
compelling voice of those who have lived out democracy's promise and met
its challenges in the tough world of national politics,” according to
David Skaggs, executive director of CDC and a former Congressman from
Colorado. Since 1996, the Stennis Center has helped plan more than 170 visits to campuses throughout the United States.
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