What it means to be part of a community — and how to play an active, informed, and responsible role in it. Citizenship is not only about voting or following laws. It is about understanding how communities work, contributing to shared life, and having the confidence and skill to shape the world around you.
Citizenship at Early Years level begins in the classroom and the immediate community. Children at this age are already citizens — of their family, their classroom, their neighbourhood — even if they have not yet encountered the formal political meaning of the word. The most important foundation for civic life is built not through formal political education but through the daily experience of belonging to a community that has rules, that resolves disagreements, that makes collective decisions, and that requires contributions from its members. The classroom can model this: class rules made together rather than imposed, genuine class meetings where children's concerns are heard, roles and responsibilities that rotate so every child contributes. In many communities around the world, citizenship is not an abstract idea — it is lived every day in community practices: the water committee, the village council, the cooperative, the community cleaning day. These are rich resources for citizenship education that are far more powerful than imported political abstractions. Teachers should draw on the specific civic structures of their community, not assume that European or North American models of civic life are the only ones worth teaching.
Any drawing showing a genuine contribution to a real community — carrying water, caring for a sibling, cleaning a shared space, helping plant crops, participating in a community activity. The because is the most important part — it requires the child to connect the action to its wider significance.
Ask: who benefits from what you are doing? Would they notice if you stopped? The answers build both civic awareness and the sense of meaningful contribution.
A good citizen in my community is someone who shows up when there is work to be done, who shares what they have when a neighbour is in need, who speaks up when something is unfair, and who takes care of the shared spaces that everyone uses. I want to be a good citizen by learning well at school so I can help my family, and by always telling adults when I see someone being treated badly.
Celebrate answers that draw on specific local civic values and practices rather than generic political abstractions. The most authentic answers will reflect the citizenship that children already see modelled by admired adults in their community.
Citizenship is only about politics and voting — it does not affect children.
Citizenship is about belonging to and contributing to communities of all kinds — family, classroom, village, city, country, and world. Children are already citizens in all of these communities, even before they can vote. The habits of citizenship — contributing to shared life, speaking up about unfairness, following and understanding rules, helping make decisions — are being built in childhood long before any formal political participation is possible.
Rules are made by people in authority and ordinary people just have to follow them.
In communities that work well, rules are made by or with the people who will live under them — and they can be changed when they are no longer fair or useful. This is true in classrooms, in families, in village councils, and in democracies. Understanding that rules are human creations that can be questioned, challenged, and changed is one of the most important foundations of civic life. People who believe they have no power over the rules that govern them are less likely to participate in the civic life that shapes those rules.
Young people cannot make a real difference to their community.
Children and young people have changed specific things about their communities throughout history — and continue to do so. Greta Thunberg began her climate protest at fifteen. Many community improvements in villages and neighbourhoods around the world have been initiated by young people who noticed a problem and acted. The scale of action does not need to be large or dramatic to be real — a letter to a headteacher, a class improvement project, a conversation with a community leader, a petition signed — these are all real civic actions with real potential consequences.
Citizenship at primary level introduces students to the structures, values, and practices of civic life — not as abstract political theory but as the living systems that organise their communities and that they are already part of. The most important distinction to establish at this level is between government — the formal structures and institutions through which communities make binding decisions — and governance — the broader set of ways communities regulate their shared life, which includes formal government but also cultural norms, community organisations, religious institutions, markets, and families. In many communities around the world, the most important governance happens not through formal state structures but through community bodies — village councils, water committees, religious leaders, cooperatives, and mutual aid networks. These are all legitimate and important forms of governance that citizenship education should honour rather than ignore. Rights: The Universal Declaration of Human Rights (1948) provides a useful framework but teachers should also introduce the idea that rights have been understood and articulated differently in different traditions — in African philosophy through the concept of ubuntu, in many indigenous traditions through relational and ecological frameworks, in Islamic tradition through the concept of haqq. The rights tradition is not only Western, and understanding this makes rights both more universal and more genuinely inclusive. Civic courage is one of the most important but least taught components of citizenship — the willingness to speak up about injustice, to disagree in public, to challenge authority when it behaves wrongly. The examples of Narges Mohammadi, Nadia Murad, bell hooks, Paulo Freire, and others from the thinker library provide powerful models of civic courage that students can engage with directly.
Dear Headteacher, I am writing on behalf of the students of Class 5 to raise a concern about the condition of the latrines on the east side of the school compound. At present, three of the four latrines are either broken or do not close properly, which means that many students — especially girls — avoid using them during the school day. This affects both health and dignity. Several students have told me they leave school early rather than use these facilities. We are asking that the broken latrine doors be repaired before the end of this term, and that a regular cleaning schedule be introduced. We are willing to help by organising a weekly student cleaning rota if the school provides the materials. We hope you will take this seriously. We are happy to meet with you to discuss it further.
Award marks for: a specific and real problem — not a generic complaint; evidence or examples that make the problem concrete; a request that is specific, realistic, and actionable; and a tone that is confident and respectful without being deferential. Strong answers will anticipate a possible objection (we cannot afford it, this is not our responsibility) and address it. The letter should feel like something the student would genuinely send.
I consider Narges Mohammadi a model citizen. She has spent years in prison for peacefully advocating for human rights and women's rights in Iran — not because she broke any moral rule but because she insisted on exercising rights that every person should have. What makes her a good citizen is not only her courage but her refusal to stop — her understanding that civic responsibility sometimes requires doing things that are personally very costly. Her civic courage is extraordinary: she has been separated from her children, physically punished, and repeatedly imprisoned, and she continues to write and organise from inside prison. What I could learn from her example is that being a good citizen is not comfortable, and that the measure of civic commitment is not what you do when it is easy but what you do when it is hard.
Accept any genuine example — from local community life, from history, or from the thinker library. Award marks for: genuine engagement with the specific qualities that make the person a good citizen, not just a general statement of admiration; honest acknowledgement of what civic action cost the person; and a specific and genuine reflection on what the student could learn. Strong answers will use at least two concepts from the unit and will connect the chosen example to the student's own situation in some way.
Democracy means majority rule — whatever most people want should happen.
Democracy requires majority decision-making to be constrained by rights — protections for individuals and minorities that cannot be overridden even by a majority vote. A majority vote to discriminate against a minority group is not democratic in a meaningful sense — it is the tyranny of the majority. This is why constitutions, human rights frameworks, and independent courts are essential components of genuine democracy: they protect individuals and minorities from what James Madison called the violence of faction.
Citizenship is passive — it just means following the laws and paying taxes.
Passive citizenship — following laws and paying taxes — is the minimum floor of civic life, not its full content. Active citizenship means participating in the decisions that affect your community, contributing to shared projects, holding power to account, speaking up when something is wrong, and helping build the conditions in which everyone can exercise their rights. Many of the most important improvements in the lives of communities have come not from governments acting alone but from citizens organising, demanding, and building what they needed.
Good citizenship means always obeying the government and the law.
The history of moral progress is in significant part the history of people who disobeyed laws they believed were unjust — and were eventually proved right. The abolition of slavery, women's right to vote, the end of apartheid, civil rights — all involved people breaking laws in order to change them. Martin Luther King argued that one has not only a legal but a moral responsibility to disobey unjust laws. Good citizenship means being loyal to the principles of justice and human dignity — and when laws contradict those principles, the good citizen's obligation to justice is higher than their obligation to the law.
Citizenship and national identity are the same thing.
Citizenship is membership of a community with rights and responsibilities — it can operate at many levels simultaneously: family, neighbourhood, school, city, country, and world. National identity is one dimension of citizenship but not the whole of it. Many of the most important civic challenges of the present — climate change, global inequality, migration, public health — can only be addressed by people who understand themselves as citizens of a world, not only a nation. And national identity can sometimes be weaponised to exclude people from citizenship — to say that some people in a community do not fully belong — which is a civic harm rather than a civic virtue.
Secondary citizenship teaching engages students with the foundational questions of political philosophy — what makes authority legitimate, when is disobedience justified, what we owe each other as global citizens — alongside the practical questions of how civic change actually happens.
The social contract tradition (Hobbes, Locke, Rousseau, Rawls) provides the central framework for thinking about the relationship between citizens and the state. Why should anyone obey a government? The answers range from Hobbesian necessity (the alternative is worse) to Lockean consent (we agree to be governed in exchange for protection of our rights) to Rawlsian justice (we accept governance structures that are fair to everyone, including the least advantaged). These are not only academic questions — they are directly relevant to students living under governments that range from liberal democracies to various forms of authoritarian rule.
Henry David Thoreau's foundational argument — that one has a moral duty to disobey unjust laws — has been developed by Mahatma Gandhi, Martin Luther King, and many others into a sophisticated tradition of nonviolent resistance. The philosophical question of when civil disobedience is justified is one of the most important in political philosophy and one with immediate practical relevance.
The concept of global citizenship challenges the assumption that civic life is primarily national. Peter Singer's argument that the affluent have strong obligations to the distant poor, and Kwame Anthony Appiah's argument for rooted cosmopolitanism — caring deeply about one's own community while recognising obligations to a wider human community — are both accessible at secondary level and directly relevant to students' lives.
The study of how social movements — civil rights, independence movements, feminist movements, environmental movements — have changed the world is one of the most important and most neglected components of citizenship education. Understanding the mechanisms of collective civic action — coalition building, framing, tactics, sustained pressure — is directly practical knowledge for students who want to be effective citizens.
Democracy and elections are the same thing.
Elections are one mechanism of democracy but not its whole content. Genuine democracy also requires: freedom of speech and press, so citizens can form and express informed opinions; freedom of association, so citizens can organise; an independent judiciary, so rights can be protected against majority violation; civil society organisations that provide independent civic capacity; and a culture of tolerance for dissent and disagreement. Countries can hold regular elections and be profoundly undemocratic in all of these other dimensions. Conversely, democratic practices of deliberation, participation, and accountability operate in communities, workplaces, and organisations that are not formal governments.
Political neutrality is the appropriate stance for citizens who do not want to take sides.
Genuine political neutrality is rarely possible and often not desirable. In the face of injustice, silence and neutrality tend to support the existing power structure — which is itself a political position. Desmond Tutu argued that in a situation of injustice, the neutral person sides with the oppressor. This does not mean that everyone must be a partisan activist — but it does mean that the claim of neutrality deserves scrutiny. Citizens who refuse to engage with political questions do not thereby opt out of politics — they leave political decisions to those who do engage, and accept the consequences.
Civic life is in decline — people are less engaged and less committed to the common good than previous generations.
The evidence on civic engagement is more mixed than the decline narrative suggests. Some traditional forms of civic participation — party membership, church attendance, formal volunteering — have declined in some countries. But other forms have grown: online organising, issue-based activism, informal mutual aid, and global solidarity movements. Young people in many parts of the world show high levels of concern for civic issues — climate, inequality, justice — even if they express this concern through different channels than their predecessors. The decline narrative often reflects the perspective of older, more powerful demographics who miss the specific civic forms they valued.
Rights are universal and apply equally to everyone everywhere.
Rights are universal in principle — they are intended to protect every human being regardless of nationality, gender, religion, or any other characteristic. But in practice, rights are very unequally distributed: access to the legal and political systems that protect rights depends heavily on wealth, status, connections, and which country you live in. The universality of rights is a moral aspiration and a political project, not a description of current reality. Part of active citizenship is working to make rights more genuinely universal — extending protection to those who currently lack it — rather than assuming the aspiration has already been achieved.
Key texts and resources: the Universal Declaration of Human Rights (1948) is freely available in hundreds of languages at un.org/en/universal-declaration-human-rights and is essential primary reading. John Rawls's A Theory of Justice (1971) is the most influential work of political philosophy of the 20th century — Chapter 1 and the Veil of Ignorance thought experiment are accessible to strong secondary students. Henry David Thoreau's Civil Disobedience (1849) is freely available online and is the foundational text on the moral obligation to disobey unjust laws. Martin Luther King's Letter from Birmingham Jail (1963) — also freely available — is the most eloquent application of Thoreau's argument to specific historical injustice. Peter Singer's Famine, Affluence, and Morality (1972) makes the strongest philosophical case for global obligations and is freely available online. Kwame Anthony Appiah's The Ethics of Identity (2005) and Cosmopolitanism (2006) provide the most nuanced philosophical treatment of rooted cosmopolitanism. For social movements: Gene Sharp's The Politics of Nonviolent Action (1973) documents 198 methods of nonviolent civic action — a practical handbook as well as a theoretical framework, available through aeinstein.org. For media and civic life: Eli Pariser's The Filter Bubble (2011) examines how algorithmic information environments affect political knowledge and civic participation. For teachers: the Council of Europe's Competences for Democratic Culture framework provides a comprehensive map of civic learning outcomes that is applicable beyond European contexts.
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