Updated
Updated · The New York Times · May 17
Americans Rebound to 70% Civics Literacy by 2025 After a Decade-Long Slide
Updated
Updated · The New York Times · May 17

Americans Rebound to 70% Civics Literacy by 2025 After a Decade-Long Slide

1 articles · Updated · The New York Times · May 17
  • 70% of Americans could name the three branches of government by 2025, up from just 25% a decade earlier, signaling a sharp rebound in basic civics knowledge.
  • The opinion essay argues that improvement reflects a broader revival in civic education rather than the continued collapse often invoked in debates over U.S. politics.
  • That revival is described as teaching how government works, how citizens can participate, and how to practice reflective patriotism and civil disagreement.
  • The piece casts the turnaround as a hopeful sign ahead of the nation’s 250th birthday, suggesting the decline in civic education bottomed out about a decade ago.
More Americans now know civics facts, but is that enough to restore trust in a democracy many feel is broken?
In an era of online outrage, will teaching civil disagreement in schools change how we talk about politics?