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From Classroom to Voting Booth:
The Effect of High School Civic Education on Turnout
Jennifer Bachner
This version: September 12, 2010Original version: May 23, 2010
Abstract
A healthy democracy requires a citizenry that participates in political life. While inter-ventions such as removing barriers to registration and mobilizing partisans have receivedfrequent scholarly attention, formal civic education has been largely ignored. Using longitu-dinal data and a matching analysis, this paper shows that students who complete a year ofcoursework in American Government/Civics are 3-6 percentage points more likely to vote inan election following high school than those without exposure to civic education. Further,this effect is magnified among students whose parents are not highly politicized. Amongstudents who report not discussing politics with their parents, additional coursework is asso-ciated with a 7-11 percentage point increase in the probability of voting. This result suggests
that civic education compensates for a relative lack of political socialization at home, andthereby enhances participatory equality.
Many thanks to Claudine Gay, Matthew Platt, Steve Ansolabehere, Sunshine Hillygus, Elena Llaudetand the participants in Harvard Universitys American Politics Research Workshop for helpful comments onearlier versions of this paper.
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1 Introduction
In a March 2010 op-ed piece for the Wall Street Journal, renowned historian and policy
analyst Diane Ravitch expressed frustration with current education reform, noting, Most
significantly, we are not producing a generation of students who are more knowledgeable,
and better prepared for the responsibilities of citizenship. The conception of citizenship as
a learned behavior has existed since ancient times, and it persists as a primary rationale for
the public school system in the United States. Yet despite a consensus on the importance of
educating for democracy among scholars, policy makers, practitioners and the public, there is
a dearth of empirical research documenting the behavioral returns to coursework in American
Government and Civics. What political or civic actions, if any, are students prompted to
take upon leaving their classrooms? This paper tackles this question by examining the effects
of high school civic education on turnout.
2 Motivating Citizens to Vote
From 1964 to 2008, young citizens voted consistently at lower rates than those over the age
of 24. On average, the turnout gap in the presidential elections that occurred during this
time period is a stunning 21 percentage points (Current Population Survey, 2010).
To account for this disparity, a number of articles argue that a lack of adult experiences,
such as marriage, home ownership and employment, depresses youth participation (Squire,
Wolfinger and Glass, 1987; Strate et al., 1989). More recent research, however, finds the life
cycle hypothesis to be of limited value (Highton and Wolfinger, 2001; Stoker and Jennings,
1995), and suggests that a lack of political knowledge (Delli Carpini and Keeter, 1996), iden-
tity (Kiousis and McDevitt, 2008) and efficacy (Pasek et al., 2008) provide more compelling
explanations. By aiding the accumulation of these and other politically relevant resources,
civic education can potentially shrink the youth turnout gap.
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Setting aside the disparity in turnout between age groups, the absolute numbers suggest
that there is significant room for improvement in turnout among all U.S. citizens. To address
this broader issue, political scientists have sought to identify interventions that increase
turnout. One group of scholars has focused on federal and state government policies, which
typically lower the barriers to registration and thereby reduce the costs associated with
voting. A second group has devoted attention to get out the vote (GOTV) efforts employed
by campaigns and non-partisan organizations. The theory motivating GOTV practices is
that potential voters are mobilized by social pressure to participate (Rosenstone and Hansen,
1993; Verba, Schlozman and Brady, 1995).
A summary of the main findings from these types of studies is presented in Table 1.1 The
evidence indicates that both public policies and private efforts can boost turnout, with an
upper bound of approximately 10 percentage points. The elimination of a registration clos-
ing date emerges as the most influential registration reform law and door-to-door canvassing
appears to be the most effective mobilization technique. While this table displays the effects
associated with the most commonly studied interventions, numerous others have received
scholarly attention, including purging voter registration rolls (Wolfinger and Rosenstone,
1980), implementing voter identification laws (Alvarez, Bailey and Katz, 2008) and sending
GOTV text messages (Dale and Strauss, 2009). But although there is an overwhelmingly
large literature on turnout, studies that treat civic education as a form of intervention are
exceedingly rare.
1For the government interventions, the effects are calculated by comparing within state (for longitudinaldata) and between state (for cross-sectional data) turnout in the presence and absence of voter registrationlaws. States with Election Day registration allow citizens to register at the polls (or do not require registra-tion). Motor voter laws refer to the requirement that a voter registration form be included with a driverslicense application. States with extended registration hours require registration offices to remain open afternormal business hours, on weekends or both. The articles cited in the non-governmental interventionssection examine non-partisan GOTV practices, though partisan efforts have likewise been found to havepositive effects on turnout.
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% Point IncreaseSelected Citations
in Turnout
Government Interventions
Election Day Registration
3.0 - 8.7Wolfinger and Rosenstone (1980);
Teixeira (1992); Fenster (1994);
Mitchell and Wlezien (1995); Rhine (1995);
Brians and Grofman (2001); Knack (2001)
Extended Registration Hours 0.7 - 5.5Wolfinger and Rosenstone (1980);
Teixeira (1992); Mitchell and Wlezien (1995)
Motor Voter Program 1.7 - 3.8Knack (1995); Rhine (1995);
Franklin and Grier (1997)
Non-Governmental Interventions
Door-to-door canvassing 7.1 - 10.2
Gerber and Green (2000);
Green, Gerber and Nickerson (2003);Gerber, Green and Shachar (2003)
Direct mailings 0.6 - 2.5Gerber and Green (2000);
Gerber, Green and Shachar (2003)
Phone calls 0.0 - 3.8Gerber and Green (2000);
Gerber and Green (2001); Nickerson (2006)
Table 1: The Influence of Interventions on Turnout.
3 Civic Education as Public Policy
Since the late 1980s, the number of states that require civic education to graduate has in-
creased monotonically. Whereas 21 states required a course in American Government/Civics
for the graduating class of 1988, 33 states imposed this requirement for the graduating class
of 2013.
2
The percentage of U.S. graduates who are exposed to classroom-based civic education,
however, far exceeds the percentage of students who are required by state laws to take a
2I collected these data using newspaper articles, state statutes, state administrative codes and the LBJSchool Survey of State Civic Education (Tolo, 1999).
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course on this subject. Every state allows school districts or the like to supplement the
imposed minimum graduation requirements, and many districts take the opportunity to do
so.3 Actual course enrollment data provide a more complete picture of the prevalence of
civic education in the U.S.
Percentage of U.S. Graduates2005 2000 1998 1994 1990 1987 1982
Government/Civics (.5 credits) 79.2 77.3 81.2 78.0 77.4 71.9 62.2American History (1 credit) 94.1 90.0 90.5 94.8 91.3 89.9 81.4
World History (1 credit) 76.5 62.1 60.2 59.4 52.0 42.0 36.3Economics (.5 credits) 46.6 49.2 45.8 44.5 47.3 33.3 27.4
Table 2: Credits Earned by High School Graduates in Social Studies: 1982-2005.
Data are taken from published tables in Roey et al. (2007) and Shettle et al. (2007). Studentswho completed the minimum indicated credits are included in each estimate.
Table 2 presents the percentage of high school graduates who completed the indicated
minimum number of credits in four social studies subjects: Government/Civics, American
History, World History and Economics.4 Although American History has continually ranked
highest in enrollment, an increasing percentage of students complete coursework in Govern-
ment/Civics, as enrollment jumped from 62.2% in 1982 to 79.2% in 2005.Figure 1 illustrates the distribution of American Government/Civics course-taking across
the U.S. for the graduating class of 1992. The map displays the median number of American
Government/Civics credits earned by graduates in each state. Although a substantial portion
of graduates were exposed to this type of coursework, there is significant regional variation.
Students in parts of the Northeast and Midwest are most likely to have taken zero courses
3Rhode Island, for example, does not require credit in civic education to graduate, yet Ponaganset High
School requires students to complete a course in American government and civics beginning with the class of2007 (Boas, December 17, 2002). In 1993, when Maryland passed a law requiring an American governmentcourse beginning with class of 1997, Anne Arundel and Montgomery already had this requirement in place(Leff, August 26, 1993).
4One credit is equal to one Carnegie Unit. A Carnegie Unit is a standard measure of in-class time. OneCarnegie Unit is equivalent to 120 in-class hours; most year-long courses are worth 1 unit. If a year-longcourse were to meet for a total of 150 hours, for example, it would be assigned 1.25 Carnegie Units.
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Legend:0 Credits.5 Credits1 Credit
Figure 1: Median Number of Credits in American Government/Civics. Data arefrom the NELS:1988. States are coded according to the median number of credits in Amer-ican Government/Civics earned by high school graduates.
in formal civic education.
4 Previous Research
Taken together, state graduation requirements and course enrollment numbers are evidence
of a widespread mandate that high school students receive classroom-based civic education.
Why is it, then, that the returns to civic education remain a fairly untilled area of research?
The lack of findings by several well-conducted studies published in the 1960s provides a
compelling explanation (Litt, 1963; Langton and Jennings, 1968; Ehman, 1969). Generally
considered the seminal work on the topic, Langton and Jennings (1968) use the 1965 wave of
the Youth-Parent Socialization Study (YPSS) to investigate whether self-reported amount
of civic education is related to political knowledge, interest and attitudes. The null results
across all of the dependent variables lead the authors to conclude, Our findings certainly
do not support the thinking of those who look to the civics curriculum in American high
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schools as even a minor source of political socialization (865). This conclusion persisted for
the next three decades.
Recently, however, scholars have begun to revisit the relationship between civics course-
work and political knowledge. Using the 1988 National Assessment of Educational Progress
(NAEP), Niemi and Junn (1998) investigate the relationship between the amount and re-
cency of American Government/Civics coursework and performance on the NAEP Civics
Assessment. The authors find that, in 9 out of the 10 areas of civics covered on the exam,
students who indicated that they had completed an American Government/Civics course
scored higher than those who had never studied subject and those who had never enrolled in
a formal course on the subject.5 The authors conclude, . . . The evidence so far suggests that
civics courses do have an effect on student knowledge, an effect that is wide-ranging in terms
of content and . . . also appears to raise students capacity for reasoning and exposition about
civic matters (70). Others who have tested the coursework-knowledge connection have
likewise uncovered positive findings (Anderson et al., 1990; Gimpel, Lay and Schuknecht,
2003).
Noticeably absent among the dependent variables in existing research on civic education
are measures of political behavior. In their analysis, Langton and Jennings (1968) construct
a variable labeled participative orientation. This measure is based on responses to an
open-ended question about what makes a person a good citizen, and it is the only dependent
variable in the study that speaks to behavior.6 One concern with this measure is that it
lumps together activities such as taking an interest in public affairs, voting and trying to
improve the country. It may be that civic education is related to these activities in different
5When civic knowledge is operationalized as a composite variable (0-100), students who complete anAmerican Government/Civics course in twelfth grade are expected to score two points higher than thosewho take the course in an earlier grade, and four points higher than those who do not take the course.
6The survey question reads, People have different ideas about what being a good citizen means. Wereinterested in what you think. Tell me how you would describe a good citizen in this country That is, whatthings about a person are most important in showing that he is a good citizen (Jennings et al., 1997).
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ways. Civic education may motivate students to vote but not cause them to stay informed
about political developments. And although a question about how citizens in the abstract
should act is certainly interesting, it does not elicit information about the political activities
in which students actually engage. I address this gap in the literature by treating turnout
as the outcome variable of interest.7
A second potential problem with existing research is error in the measurement of civic
education. The operational definition of civic education is often derived from a survey
question that asks students to report how much American Government/Civics coursework
they have completed, with answer choices such as: less than a year, a year, two years or
more than two years. Students may inadvertently misreport this number either because
they cannot remember correctly or because they are unsure about which courses count
as American Government/Civics courses.8 In an analysis of the amount of misreporting
of U.S. history course-taking present in the 1994 NAEP, Niemi and Smith (2003) uncover
deeply troubling results. The authors find, for example, that 31.3% of high school students
reported enrolling in a U.S. history course during their senior year, whereas the 1994 High
School Transcript Study estimates actual enrollment to be 12.2% (18). It seems reasonable
to expect that a similarly disturbing amount of misreporting takes place with respect to
American Government/Civics classes.
Measurement error may have contributed to the null findings in previous research. If
the error is random, meaning students are just as likely to under-report as they are to
over-report, then the effect of civic education will be biased toward zero. If students tend
7Existing research that investigates the effects of civic education on voting and other forms of participationfocus on particular curriculua, such as Kids Voting USA and Project Citizen (Simon and Merrill, 1998; Vontz,Metcalf and Patrick, 2000; Meirick and Wackman, 2004), as opposed to the cumulative amount of classroom-based civic education.
8Many students around the country, for example, take a course titled American Government and Eco-nomics. Other ambiguous courses include American Foreign Policy and Contemporary World Affairs. Inanswering the survey question, some students may include this course in their total count of civics courseswhile others may not.
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to systematically over-report, as Niemi and Smiths (2003) findings suggest, the treatment
effect will likely be understated. To ensure accuracy and consistency in my measure of civic
education, I rely on student transcript data. These data allow me to control the types of
courses that are included in each students count and to tally the amount of actual exposure
to this coursework.9
A final reason to reconsider existing notions about the returns to civic education is the
possibility of interaction effects. It may be that the effect of American Government/Civics
courses depends upon other agents of political socialization, such as parents, peer groups
and the media. Political information can be acquired from each of these sources, and it may
be that exposure to one affects the influence of another. This article examines the effects
of civic education from this perspective by testing whether amount of civics coursework
interacts with level of parental politicization in its effect on turnout.
5 From Classroom to Voting Booth
5.1 A Model of Participation Applied to Civic Education
The Civic Voluntarism Model (Verba, Schlozman and Brady, 1995) provides a theoretical
framework for charting a path from American Government/Civics coursework to turnout.
The model states that participation is driven by three factors: psychological engagement,
resources and recruitment. Psychological engagement and resources are the two most impor-
tant of the three factors; whereas participation often occurs in the absence of recruitment,
it rarely takes place when the potential participant lacks either resources or psychological
engagement (270).
High school civic education courses can strengthen students psychological engagement
9The transcript data sets list the number of Carnegie Units, a standard measure of in-class time, assignedto each course.
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with politics by increasing their political knowledge. Political knowledge promotes interest,
trust and efficacy in the political system by enabling citizens to judge politicians using more
than a few misleading sound bites and images (Verba, Schlozman and Brady, 1995; Delli
Carpini and Keeter, 1996; Zaller, 1992). When the media cover a mistake by a politician,
knowledgeable citizens will integrate this new piece of information into their existing per-
ception of the featured persons character and policy agenda. An uninformed citizen, in
contrast, is likely to form a much more negative opinion of the politician; the uninformed
citizen possesses no information to counterbalance the negative news story. As a result,
citizens who lack political knowledge may feel mistrustful of the political system. Popkin
and Dimock (1999) illustrate how background and contextual knowledge can influence the
perception of a political event:
To persons who understand the institutions of politics, a long set of exchanges
between, say, Bill Clinton and Robert Dole can be as clear as a sustained volley
in tennis; to persons without any knowledge of institutions, their exchange is
hard to follow and becomes indistinguishable from a food fight or mud-slinging
(134).
In short, less knowledgeable citizens develop more negative views on government and elected
officials. And these negative views, whether they take the form of cynicism, mistrust or
alienation, have a demobilizing effect on those who posses them.
Civic education also has the potential to increase a students store of civic skills. Civic
skills are the communications and organizational abilities that allow citizens to use time
and money effectively in political life (Verba, Schlozman and Brady, 1995, 304). These
skills make participation easier and thus more likely. Even the simple act of voting requires
citizens to, at the very least, determine how to register to vote and locate their polling place.
Further, the probability that citizens will vote is increased if they are able to discuss politics
with friends and persuade others of their political beliefs.
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A number of studies investigate whether civic education classes in general, and civic
education curricula in particular, provide students with politically relevant skills. Gimpel,
Lay and Schuknecht (2003) find that the students who take more than a year of civics
coursework, as compared to students with no civics coursework, discuss politics with friends
and family five percent more per week (149). This effect is perhaps attributable to curricula
that incorporate political discussion and other interactive forms of learning into lesson plans.
Kids Voting USA, for example, is a K-12 curriculum developed in 1987 that encourages
students to engage in activities that teach civic skills. These activities include mock elec-
tions, debates and role-playing. Evaluations of this curriculum reveal the strong, positive
effects the lessons have on students deliberative skills. McDevitt and Kiousis (2004), in a
comparison of student survey responses before and after exposure to the curriculum, find
that the students gained both competence and confidence in their ability to discuss politics.
The authors write, Kids Voting. . . promoted conversational skills and related dispositions
such as the willingness to disagree, willingness to listen to opponents, testing out opinions
in conversation, and challenging the views of parents (10).
A second curriculum that has been found to have significant effects on students devel-
opment of civic skills is We the People: Project Citizen. Today, this curriculum is used by
teachers in all 50 states. The curriculum asks students to research a policy issue relevant to
their community, develop solutions and communicate these solutions to civic and political
leaders. An evaluation of the program by Vontz, Metcalf and Patrick (2000) reveals that
participation in the program is associated with a significant increase in a students confi-
dence in her ability to identify important public policies, describe public policies to others
and formulate opinions on public policies.10
10Student Voices is another popular curriculum that has been shown to increase youth civic engagement.Participation in two semesters of the program is associated with an increase in internal efficacy, candidateknowledge and political attentiveness (Pasek et al., 2008).
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5.2 Taking Parents into Account
Parents exert a nontrivial influence on adolescents political development through explicit
lessons and by serving as role models (Hess and Torney, 1967). Parent to child transmis-
sion, however, is not inevitable. Although parents have an inherent potential for successful
transmission (Tedin, 1974, 1592), this potential is best realized under certain conditions.
Political beliefs are transmitted most often from parents to children when perceptual accu-
racy and issue salience are high. Children, in other words, are likely to adopt their parents
attitudes when they develop an accurate understanding of these views, and when these atti-
tudes are important to the parents. This suggests that successful transmission depends upon
the level of parental politicization. Highly politicized parents will possess stronger opinions
on the importance of voting, their partisan orientation and policy issues than parents who
are less interested in or less knowledgeable about politics. As a result, highly-politicized
parents are more likely to emit strong and clear cues regarding their political attitudes.
But what is the mechanism that drives the transmission process? Political discussion is a
key answer to this question (Valentino and Sears, 1998; Verba, Schlozman and Brady, 1995;
Jennings, Stoker and Bowers, 2009). Family discussions about politics provide opportunities
for children to absorb cues given by their parents. As such, I use the amount of political
discussion within the family as an indicator of parental political socialization.
I expect that children whose parents are not highly politicized will derive a greater benefit
from civic education than their peers. This is because low levels of parent politicization
should leave the child bereft or relatively open to influence from other socializing agents
(Jennings, Stoker and Bowers, 2009, 13). Parents who are interested in politics, and who
share this interest with their children, are likely to crowd out the influence of schools.
Students whose parents are not highly politicized, in contrast, have more to gain from their
civics coursework.
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6 Data and Methods
6.1 National Education Longitudinal Studies
The above discussion yields two hypotheses: (1) additional coursework in civic education
will increase turnout and (2) this increase will be largest among students whose parents are
not highly politicized. To test these hypotheses, I employ the National Education Longitu-
dinal Studies of 1988 (NELS:1988) and 2002 (NELS:2002). These studies were conducted in
multiple waves and contain student surveys, student transcripts and parent surveys.
The NELS:1988 was conducted from 1988 to 2000. In 1988, a baseline survey was admin-
istered to a nationally representative sample of eighth-graders from 1,052 public and private
schools. Subsequent surveys were administered in the spring of 1990, 1992, 1994 and 2000
to a random subset of the original sample. The completion rate for the first wave is 93%,
and the completion rate for all five waves is 79% (Curtin et al., 2002).
The NELS:2002 was first administered to a nationally-representative sample of high
school sophomores in 2002 from 752 public and private schools. The response rate for
the first wave is 87.3%. This sample of students was interviewed again (along with a fresh-
ening sample) in 2004 and 2006. The response rates for these waves are 90.8% and 89.1%,
respectively (Ingels et al., 2007).
In both the NELS:1988 and NELS:2002, transcripts were collected during students senior
year of high school. The transcript data sets list every course in which each student enrolled,
the year and grade-level during which each course was taken, the length of each course (year-
long, semester or quarter), the grade earned in each course, and the number of Carnegie Units
assigned to each course.
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6.2 Voting Variables
The dependent variables measure students voting behavior in the years following high school.
The 1994 and 2000 waves of the NELS:1988 contain questions that ask students whether
they voted in the 1992 presidential election, the 1993-94 state/local elections, the 1996
presidential election and any election between 1998 and 2000. In the 2006 wave of the
NELS:2002, students were asked whether they voted in the 2004 presidential election and
any state/local election between 2004 and 2006. Figure 2 displays the percentage of students
who indicated that they voted in each of these six elections.
1 99 2 1 99 3 94 1 99 6 1 99 8 00 2 00 4 2 00 4 06
Elections
%ofStudentsWhoVoted
0.0
0.2
0.4
0.6
0.8
1.0
0.46
0.31
0.57
0.42
0.510.48
Figure 2: Summary of Voting Variables. This figure displays (1) the percentage of 1992graduates in NELS:1988 that voted in the 1992, 1993-94, 1996 and 1998-00 elections and(2) the percentage of 2004 graduates in the NELS:2002 that voted in the 2004 and 2004-06elections.
6.3 Civic Education Variables
The independent variable of interest are the number of credits earned in four categories of
civic education.11 There are a variety of courses related to American government, politics
11Approximately 70% of students in the NELS:1988 and 73% of students in the NELS:2002 completedsome type civic education coursework.
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and citizenship that appear on students transcripts. Guided by previous research and the
descriptions of all 44 civic education courses, I grouped these courses into four categories:
American Government/Civics, American Problems, American Government and Economics
and Other Government. These categories parallel those used by Langton and Jennings
(1968), with the exception of the American Government and Economics category, which I
have added. Figure 3 displays the distribution of these categories for each data set.
(a) NELS:1988
Civic Education Course Categories
%o
fStudents
0.0
0.2
0.4
0.6
0.8
1.0
American Amer ican American Other
Gov/Civics Problems Gov/Econ Government
0.82
0.05
0.12 0.1
(b) NELS:2002
Civic Education Course Categories
%o
fStudents
0.0
0.2
0.4
0.6
0.8
1.0
American American American Other
Gov/Civics Problems Gov/Econ Government
0.86
0.02
0.110.07
Figure 3: Distribution of Civic Education Course Categories. This figure shows thepercentage of students who completed coursework in each category among all students whocompleted civic education coursework. The percentages in each graph sum to more than 100because some students completed coursework in multiple categories.
The American Government/Civics category includes traditional courses, such as Amer-
ican Government, Basic Government and Civics. Of the students who completed civic
education coursework, an overwhelming majority (82% in the NELS:1988 and 86% in the
NELS:2002) completed this type of course. This is the type of course that is most commonly
offered by schools to fulfill a state or school district imposed civic education requirement.
Although the transcript data sets do not contain information about which courses were re-
quired by the school districts for graduation, it is reasonable to expect that a majority of
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students who complete a traditional American Government/Civics course do so either be-
cause it is required or because it is the norm at their school. Further, the inclusion of the
other course categories in each model controls for student interest in taking civic education
courses beyond a traditional American Government/Civics course.
The American Problems category includes courses with titles such as Contemporary
American Political Issues. The popularity of this course has declined dramatically since
its heyday in the 1960s, and only a small percentage of students in the sample at hand
completed this type of course.12
The third category includes courses in which economic issues are woven into the study
of government institutions.13 This type of course has grown in popularity over the past
few decades. Approximately 12% of students in the NELS:1988 and 11% of students in the
NELS:2002 earned credit in this type of course.
Lastly, the Other Government category includes courses in specialized areas of Amer-
ican government, comparative politics and international relations. Courses in this category
appear to be electives rather than required classes. As a result, it is possible that the students
who enrolled in these classes are particularly interested in politics, and it is this interest,
rather than the course itself, that drives their future political participation.
6.4 Control Variables
Each model includes four categories of control variables: measures of civic engagement, school
and state characteristics, home resources and student demographics. The variables in the
civic engagement category are intended to capture a students prior propensity to participate
12
While 18.5% of students enrolled in this type of course in the 1960-61 academic year, this number haddropped to 8.9% in the 1972-1973 academic year, and continued to decline in the following years ( Niemi andSmith, 2001). In Langton and Jenningss (1968) sample, 67% completed an American Government course,37% completed an American Problems course and 10% completed an Other course (of those students whoindicated that they had taken a civic education course) (855).
13These types of courses are different from those in which students spend one semester focused on Gov-ernment and the second on Economics.
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in civic and political life. These variables include participation in extra-curricular activities,
participation in student government and participation in school service clubs.14 In addition,
the two data sets contain a few non-overlapping variables that may capture student interest
in politics. The regressions that use the NELS:1988 data include a variable that controls
for eighth-grade interest in social studies.15 The regressions that use the NELS:2002 data
include variables that ask twelfth-grade students how important it is to be (1) patriotic and
(2) an active and informed citizen.16
Included in the home resources category is a measure of parental political socialization,
which is operationalized as the frequency with which students report discussing current
events with their parents. This variable is a three-point scale that ranges from never to
often.17 Parents highest level of education, whether the family receives a daily newspaper,
and socioeconomic status are also included to control for relevant resources.18
It is reasonable to expect that schools in which students take more civics coursework
have other attributes that foster political participation. I control for academic quality by
including the percentage of students who attended a four year college in each model. I also
control for whether the school is public or private, the urbanicity of the school (urban, rural,
suburban) and whether the state imposes a civic education course requirement. Figure A-2
summarizes the state requirement variable.
The final set of independent variables control for student background characteristics that
14The school activities measure is a count of the number of hours per week spent on extra-curricularactivities in tenth and twelfth grade. The student government variable measures participation in eighth,tenth and twelfth grade, and the service club variable measures participation in tenth and twelfth grade.
15The eighth-grade survey asks students whether they look forward to social studies. This variable is afour-point scale that ranges from strongly disagree to strongly agree.
16Both of these variables are three-point scales that range from not important to very important.17The parent survey also contains a question about the amount of discussion about current events that
takes place at home. This variable, however is only weakly correlated with the student variable aboutpolitical discussion. Because of social desirability, the parent variable seems less reliable than the studentvariable, although it is included in each model as a control.
18Socioeconomic status is a composite variable that includes fathers education, mothers education, fa-thers occupation, mothers occupation and family income.
17
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have been shown to influence turnout. I control for gender, race and parents native language.
A binary variable indicating whether the student received a high school diploma and a binary
variable indicating whether the student ever transferred schools are also included.
7 Results
7.1 Direct Effect of Civic Education
For each election, I estimate a logit model with clustered standard errors (clustering on
school). Included in each model is an interaction between American Government/Civics
coursework and the measure of parental politicization.19
The raw output from these six
regressions is presented in Table A-1.
q
q
q
q
q
q
0.3 0.2 0.1 0.0 0.1 0.2 0.3
Change in Probability of Voting (0 to 1 Course)
Ele
ctions
q
q
q
q
q
q
1992
199394
1996
199800
2004
200406 90% CI95% CI
Figure 4: Civic Education and Voting. This graph presents the first difference estimates asso-ciated with taking a year-long course in American Government/Civics versus taking zero courses.
19The American Government/Civics variable and the measure of parental politicization are centered suchthat the mean of each of these variables is 0. Alternative specifications show that there is no interactiveeffect between parental politicization and the other categories of civic education.
18
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To test the direct effect of civic education, I calculate the change in probability of
voting in each election associated with an increase in civics coursework. The only course
category that consistently exerts a positive, statistically significant effect on voting behavior
is American Government/Civics. Figure 4 displays the expected changes in probability of
voting in each election associated with a one-year increase in American Government/Civics
coursework, as well as the 90% and 95% confidence intervals associated with these changes.20
Pr(Voting|0 Courses) Pr(Voting|0.5 Courses) SE of
1992 .539 .562 .023* .0111993-94 .355 .380 .026* .0101996 .627 .644 .016 .0111998-00 .446 .474 .027* .010
2004 .574 .592 .017 .0092004-06 .546 .558 .013 .009
Pr(Voting|0 Courses) Pr(Voting|1 Course) SE of
1992 .539 .584 .045* .0211993-94 .355 .407 .052* .0191996 .627 .660 .032 .0211998-00 .446 .501 .055* .0202004 .574 .609 .034 .0192004-06 .546 .571 .025 .018
Table 3: Effects of American Government/Civics Coursework on Voting. Theestimates for 1992, 1993-94, 1996 and 1998-00 are based on the NELS:1988 data. Theestimates for 2004 and 2004-06 are based on the NELS:2002 data. * p < .05.
The precise first difference estimates and standard errors associated with an increase in
American Government/Civics coursework from zero to one-half and zero to one are displayed
in Table 3. For the 1992 presidential election, students who completed a one-year course
were 4.5 percentage points more likely to vote than those who took zero courses. The
largest effect appears in the 1998-2000 election period, when students who took one year of
American Government/Civics were 5.5 percentage points more likely to vote. The smallest
20Technically the increase is one Carnegie Unit.
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effect appears in the 2004-2006 election period, where this increase in coursework is associated
with a 2.5 percentage point increase in probability of voting.
7.2 Interactive Effect of Civic Education
To test whether parental politicization mediates the relationship between civic education
and turnout, I calculate the change in probability of voting associated with an increase
in American Government/Civics coursework while holding the political discussion variable
fixed at never. For all six elections, the estimates are positive, substantively large and
statistically significant.
(a) Interactive Effect of American Gov/Civics
q
q
q
q
q
q
0.3 0.2 0.1 0.0 0.1 0.2 0.3
Change in Probability of Voting (0 to 1 Course)
Elections
q
q
q
q
q
q
1992
199394
1996
199800
2004
200406 90% CI95% CI
(b) Interactive Effect in the 1992 Election
0.2 0.4 0.6 0.8 1.0 1.2 1.4 1.6 1.8 2.0
0.4
0.2
0.0
0.2
0.4
American Governmet/Civics Coursework (in Carnegie Units)
P
robablityofVoting
in
1992
Frequent Discussion
No Discussion
First Difference Estimates
95% Confidence Band
Zero
Figure 5: Civic Education, Parental Politicization and Voting. Graph (a) presents thefirst difference estimates associated with taking a year-long course in American Government/Civicsversus taking zero courses when parental politicization is held fixed at never. Graph (b) displaysthe first difference estimates for the 1992 presidential election that are associated with a range ofchanges in American Government/Civics coursework.
The predicted effects strongly support the argument that civic education interacts with
parental politicization in its effect on turnout. Table 4 displays the first difference estimates
and standard errors associated with increasing American Government/Civics coursework
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among students who report never discussing current events with their parents. For the 1992
election, a one-year increase in American Government/Civics coursework is expected to
increase a students probability of voting by 11.4 percentage points. Across all six elections,
the average estimated increase in probability is 8.7 percentage points.
Pr
Voting|0 Courses, Pr
Voting|0.5 Courses, SE of
No Discussion
No Discussion
1992 .462 .519 .058* .0161993-94 .297 .377 .039* .0141996 .534 .581 .047* .0171998-00 .365 .412 .047* .0152004 .464 .539 .037* .0152004-06 .426 .459 .033* .014
Pr
Voting|0 Courses, Pr
Voting|1 Course, SE of
No Discussion
No Discussion
1992 .462 .576 .114* .0301993-94 .297 .377 .080* .0291996 .534 .626 .092* .0321998-00 .365 .461 .096* .0312004 .464 .539 .075* .0302004-06 .426 .493 .067* .028
Table 4: Effects of Civic Education and Parental Political Socialization on Voting.The estimates for 1992, 1993-94, 1996 and 1998-00 are based on the NELS:1988 data. Theestimates for 2004 and 2004-06 are based on the NELS:2002 data. * p < .05.
8 Robustness of the Results
To test whether the results hold up using alternative statistical methods, I perform a match-
ing analysis in which exposure to one year of American Government/Civics coursework (ver-
sus none) is the treatment variable. Matching ensures that the control group resembles the
treatment group and, as a result, the estimates derived from the regressions using matched
data will be unbiased with respect to the observed covariates (Rosenbaum and Rubin, 1985).
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(a)NELS:1988: Before Matching
0.0 0.2 0.4 0.6 0.8
0.0
0.5
1.0
1.5
2.0
2.5
Propensity Score
Density
Control GroupTreatment Group
(b)NELS:1988: After Matching
0.0 0.2 0.4 0.6 0.8
0.0
0.5
1.0
1.5
2.0
2.5
Propensity Score
Density
Control GroupTreatment Group
(c) NELS:2002: Before Matching
0.0 0.2 0.4 0.6 0.8 1.0
0.0
0.5
1.0
1.5
2.0
2.5
3.0
3.5
Propensity Score
Density
Control GroupTreatment Group
(d) NELS:2002: After Matching
0.2 0.0 0.2 0.4 0.6 0.8 1.0
0.0
0.5
1.0
1.5
2.0
2.5
Propensity Score
Density
Control GroupTreatment Group
Figure 6: Propensity Score Distributions for Matched and Unmatched Data.
22
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Observations included in the matched analysis are those students that completed either
exactly one year of American Government/Civics coursework or none. This allows the esti-
mated effects to be easily compared to those presented in Figures 4 and 5. Because several of
the control variables are continuous, I employ nearest neighbor propensity score matching.21
Figure 6 displays, for each data set, the propensity score distributions for the treatment and
control groups before and after matching. The graphs demonstrate that the balance is much
improved in the matched data sets. More detailed statistics on the balance are presented in
Table A-2.
(a) Direct Effect of American Gov/Civics
q
q
q
q
q
q
0.3 0.2 0.1 0.0 0.1 0.2 0.3
Change in Probability of Voting (0 to 1 Course)
Elections
q
q
q
q
q
q
1992
199394
1996
199800
2004
200406
q
q
q
q
q
q
.045
.052
.032
.054
.034
.025
.057
.061
.049
.060
.035
.030
Unmatched 95% CIMatched 95% CI
(b) Interactive Effect of American Gov/Civics
q
q
q
q
q
q
0.3 0.2 0.1 0.0 0.1 0.2 0.3
Change in Probability of Voting (0 to 1 Course)
Elections
q
q
q
q
q
q
1992
199394
1996
199800
2004
200406
.111
.073
.091
.087
.074
.063
.149
.095
.126
.082
.138
.119
q
q
q
q
q
qUnmatched 95% CIMatched 95% CI
Figure 7: The Effects of Civic Education Before and After Matching. Graphs (a) and (b)present first difference estimates for both the unmatched and matched data sets. The dotted linesare the 95% confidence intervals associated with the matched estimates.
Figure 7 displays the first differences associated with a one-year increase in American
Government/Civics coursework for the both the matched and unmatched data sets. Re-garding the direct effects, the matched estimates are very similar to the unmatched esti-
21More specifically, I perform one-to-one matching with a caliper of 0.6. In the matched data sets, thetransfer variable is collinear and so it is dropped from the regressions. The regression results are presentedin Table A-1.
23
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mates, although the effects for 2004 and 2004-06 elections lose statistical significance with
the matched data.
Turning to the interactive effects, the matched estimates again support the conclusion
that civic education strongly encourages students whose parents are not highly politicized
to vote. The matched estimates are all significant at the 10% level (or lower), and the
magnitudes of the effects are sizable, with the largest being a 15 percentage point boost in
the probability of turnout.
9 Conclusion
The effects of American Government/Civics coursework on turnout uncovered in this analysis
are quite large; they are comparable in size to many of the interventions displayed in Table
1. Further, because the probability that a young citizen votes in a presidential election
hovers around 50%, even a three or four percentage point increase in probability could be
the difference between this citizen turning out to vote and staying home on Election Day.
Among students whose parents are not highly politicized, the effects of American Gov-
ernment/Civics coursework are even larger. This suggests that civic education compensates
for relative lack of political socialization at home. A brief examination of the composition of
this group shows that it contains a disproportionate amount of students from the lowest SES
quartile, a demographic that is historically under-represented in politics (Verba, Schlozman
and Brady, 1995). A graph of this distribution appears in Figure A-1. Civic education,
through its ability to fill a politicizing void left by parents, may help level the participatory
playing field among young citizens.
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Appendix
None
Some
Often
SES Q1 (lowest)
SES Q2
SES Q3
SES Q4
% of Students
0 10 20 30 40 50 60 70
Amou
ntofDiscussion
19.1
24.2
26.7
29.9
34.3
26
22.7
16.9
44
23.5
19
13.4
Figure A-1: Socioeconomic Status and Discussion about Current Events. The percentagesfor 1992, 1993-94, 1996 and 1998-00 are from the NELS:1988 and the percentages for 2004 and 2004-06 are from the NELS:2002.
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Legend:
1992 or BeforeBetween 1993 and 2004
2005 or Later
No State Requirement
Figure A-2: State Graduation Requirements in American Government/Civics.This map displays the time period in which each state instituted a civic education require-ment. The years refer to graduating classes. The data were collected from newspaperarticles, state statutes, state administrative codes and the LBJ School Survey of State CivicEducation (Tolo, 1999).
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Ta
bleA-1:RegressionResults
Un
matchedData
MatchedData
1992
1993-94
1
996
1998-00
2004
2004-06
1992
1993-94
1996
1998-00
2004
2004-06
CivicEducation
AmerGov/Civics
.184
.222
.
145
.216
.146
.114
.234
.264
.222
.236
.144
.120
(.084)
(.084)
(.09)
(.082)
(.081)
(.075)
(.116)
(.115)
(.123)
(.120)
(
.121)
(.123)
AmerProblems
.131
.118
.
117
-.298
-.259
-.065
-.023
-.488
.123
.157
.628
.172
(.251)
(.225)
(.
219)
(.186)
(.342)
(.333)
(.344)
(.337)
(.311)
(.467)
(
.508)
(.542)
AmerGov/Econ
-.047
.034
.
072
.283
.285
.095
.047
-.190
.266
.140
.337
-.216
(.115)
(.115)
(.
121)
(.11)
(.103)
(.11)
(.233)
(.178)
(.259)
(.231)
(
.286)
(.223)
OtherGov
-.191
.006
.
096
.116
.088
.085
-.430
-.030
.270
.003
-.031
-.106
(.142)
(.13)
(.
179)
(.158)
(.136)
(.140)
(.227)
(.290)
(.386)
(.263)
(
.299)
(.220)
CivicEngagement
ExtracurricularHours
.038
.042
.
036
.036
.017
.018
.053
.056
.083
.057
-.003
.005
(.011)
(.011)
(.
012)
(.011)
(.009)
(.009)
(.021)
(.021)
(.024)
(.021)
(.02)
(.019)
ServiceClub
.028
.038
.
082
.091
.170
.142
.030
-.018
.290
.101
.362
.251
(.055)
(.051)
(.
059)
(.053)
(.047)
(.044)
(.102)
(.096)
(.118)
(.100)
(
.099)
(.094)
StudentGov
.168
.141
.
275
.142
.115
.151
.067
.044
.227
.159
.192
.167
(.043)
(.041)
(.
052)
(.043)
(.053)
(.053)
(.078)
(.078)
(.091)
(.088)
(
.103)
(.106)
S.S.LookForward
.034
.043
.
022
.127
.024
.154
.028
.117
(.032)
(.032)
(.
036)
(.035)
(.065)
(.066)
(.076)
(.066)
Citizenship
-Importance
.271
.258
.330
.281
(.047)
(.045)
(
.098)
(.096)
Patriotism
-Importance
.096
.110
-.015
.010
(.039)
(.039)
(
.082)
(.083)
HomeResources
ParentEducation
.047
.034
.01
.068
-.001
.002
-.010
.207
-.163
.095
-.076
-.008
(.046)
(.045)
(.05)
(.046)
(.023)
(.023)
(.088)
(.084)
(.101)
(.091)
(
.045)
(.047)
Newspaper
.077
.204
.
015
-.03
.101
.104
-.081
.118
-.023
-.214
.067
.174
(.066)
(.071)
(.
072)
(.071)
(.058)
(.058)
(.13)
(.136)
(.141)
(.14)
(
.110)
(.118)
S.E.S.Statu
s
.234
.004
.
192
-.025
.309
.239
.435
-.188
.300
-.085
.405
.215
(.072)
(.072)
(.08)
(.076)
(.066)
(.064)
(.142)
(.133)
(.162)
(.145)
(
.135)
(.14)
Discuss
.224
.232
.
317
.294
.362
.392
.404
.281
.373
.34
.573
.576
(.045)
(.046)
(.
051)
(.046)
(.041)
(.041)
(.117)
(.123)
(.133)
(.123)
(
.121)
(.117)
Discuss(Parent)
.284
.171
.
257
.195
.118
.139
.192
.198
.400
.271
.184
.209
(.045)
(.049)
(.
050)
(.049)
(.041)
(.041)
(.093)
(.091)
(.101)
(.098)
(
.089)
(.088)
StudentDemographics
Male
.035
.090
-.077
-.073
-.136
-.179
.072
-.034
.191
.051
-.083
-.193
(.058)
(.057)
(.
066)
(.059)
(.054)
(.053)
(.111)
(.111)
(.134)
(.113)
(
.121)
(.125)
Black
-.569
-.141
.
089
.179
.016
.113
-.516
-.362
-.135
.033
-.176
-.121
(.112)
(.114)
(.
128)
(.12)
(.105)
(.097)
(.200)
(.183)
(.23)
(.215)
(
.206)
(.196)
Asian
-.597
-.315
-.345
-.350
-.518
-.539
-1.079
-.412
-.560
-.370
-.481
-.662
(.127)
(.141)
(.
145)
(.154)
(.13)
(.128)
(.287)
(.314)
(.32)
(.293)
(
.269)
(.26)
Hispanic
-.074
.077
.
210
.088
-.280
-.280
-.352
-.137
.423
.173
.042
-.463
(.125)
(.127)
(.
136)
(.129)
(.101)
(.103)
(.301)
(.291)
(.346)
(.32)
(
.237)
(.237)
Amer.India
n
-.226
.074
.
104
-.111
-.105
-.057
-.163
-.175
-.301
.763
-.292
-.532
(.291)
(.286)
(.
338)
(.382)
(.301)
(.312)
(.530)
(.427)
(.721)
(.8)
(
.757)
(.841)
27
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Ta
bleA-1:RegressionResults
Un
matchedData
MatchedData
1992
1993-94
1
996
1998-00
2004
2004-06
1992
1993-94
1996
1998-00
2004
2004-06
ParentEnglish
.45
.357
.
468
.444
.527
.426
.254
.479
.349
1.032
.555
.390
(.114)
(.125)
(.
128)
(.129)
(.103)
(.102)
(.258)
(.252)
(.314)
(.326)
(
.232)
(.215)
H.S.Diplom
a
.38
.423
.
282
.222
.329
.349
.336
.472
-.199
.493
.108
.334
(.210)
(.238)
(.
241)
(.254)
(.212)
(.227)
(.442)
(.516)
(.482)
(.535)
(
.356)
(.376)
TransferStu
dent
-.181
-.078
-.361
-.337
-.096
.741
(.122)
(.123)
(.
143)
(.134)
(.604)
(.559)
SchoolandState
Chars.
Urban
.023
-.015
.
076
.053
.022
-.008
.202
.096
.179
.218
.074
-.009
(.087)
(.084)
(.
086)
(.087)
(.082)
(.08)
(.167)
(.169)
(.178)
(.159)
(
.139)
(.139)
Rural
-.015
.055
.
011
.145
.024
.024
-.052
.081
-.059
.249
.297
.336
(.079)
(.079)
(.
077)
(.077)
(.085)
(.082)
(.144)
(.146)
(.145)
(.154)
(
.214)
(.204)
Private
-.116
-.084
.
106
-.008
-.009
.042
-.323
-.197
.124
-.31
-.104
-.14
(.109)
(.11)
(.
115)
(.112)
(.092)
(.09)
(.203)
(.22)
(.235)
(.212)
(
.168)
(.169)
%
AttendingCollege
.053
-.030
.
016
.015
.035
.017
.036
-.117
.074
.105
.060
.058
(.033)
(.037)
(.
034)
(.035)
(.034)
(.033)
(.063)
(.064)
(.068)
(.069)
(
.076)
(.073)
StateReq.Civ.Ed.
.061
.022
.
041
.185
-.079
-.034
.337
.115
.099
.215
.091
.222
(.068)
(.067)
(.
069)
(.066)
(.071)
(.069)
(.129)
(.131)
(.124)
(.131)
(
.132)
(.131)
Interaction
AmerGov/Civics
Discuss
-.308
-.155
-.247
-.194
-.149
-.160
-.420
-.177
-.345
-.107
-.399
-.342
(.105)
(.105)
(.
119)
(.106)
(.087)
(.079)
(.163)
(.164)
(.183)
(.170)
(
.171)
(.161)
(Constant)
-1.914
-2.176
-1
.247
-2.17
-1.919
-1.969
-1.322
-2.744
-1.12
-3.693
-1.72
-2.178
(.361)
(.361)
(.
378)
(.369)
(.338)
(.355)
(.707)
(.729)
(.737)
(.739)
(
.636)
(.662)
N
5775
5769
4
985
5010
6565
6575
1560
1560
1346
1340
1542
1544
Estimatesarelogitcoefficients.Clusteredstandarderrors
areshowninparentheses.
AmerGov/Civic
siscodedasdummyvariableforthematchedregressions,where1indicatescomp
letionofayear-longcourse.
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NELS:1988
NELS:2002
Unmatched
Matched
Unmatched
Matched
M
ean
Mean
Mean
Mean
Mean
Mean
Mean
Mean
Tre
ated
Control
Treated
Control
Treated
Control
Treated
Control
DependentVariables(0,1
)
Voted1992
0.59
0.55
0.
59
0.
54
Voted1993-94
0.
43
0.
38
0.
44
0.
38
Voted1996
0.
67
0.
62
0.
67
0.
61
Voted1998-00
0.
52
0.
45
0.
51
0.
47
Voted2004
0.60
0.59
0.61
0.58
Voted2004-06
0.57
0.56
0.58
0.56
Covariates
AmerP
roblems(#
ofcredits)
0.
01
0.
07
0.02
0.03
0.
01
0.
02
0.01
0.01
AmerG
ov/Econ(#
ofcredits)
0.
05
0.
17
0.06
0.09
0.
02
0.
20
0.
03
0.
07
OtherGov(#
ofcredits)
0.
03
0.
09
0.03
0.05
0.
03
0.
09
0.05
0.05
ExtracurricularHours(#
perweek)
3.81
3.89
3.78
3.86
6.76
6.91
6.90
6.74
Service
Club(0,1,2)
0.31
0.33
0.32
0.34
0.
38
0.
44
0.43
0.41
StudentGov(1,2,3)
0.43
0.41
0.41
0.42
0.27
0.26
0.27
0.28
S.S.Lo
okForward(1,2,3)
2.
57
2.
70
2.62
2.60
Citizen
ship-Importance(1,2,3)
2.40
2.37
2.41
2.41
Patriot
ism
-Importance(1,2,3)
2.
21
2.
13
2.14
2.17
Parent
Edu.(6categories)
3.
12
3.
41
3.23
3.21
4.
77
4.
92
5.
05
4.
81
Newspaper(0,1)
0.77
0.79
0.78
0.77
0.67
0.69
0.69
0.67
S.E.S.(
-2.25,2.2)
0.
06
0.
24
0.14
0.12
0.
17
0.
25
0.
30
0.
21
Discuss(0,1,2)
1.92
1.91
1.92
1.91
2.07
2.04
2.04
2.07
Discuss(Parent;0,1,2)
2.36
2.38
2.36
2.36
2.36
2.38
2.37
2.37
Male(0,1)
0.45
0.46
0.43
0.47
0.50
0.48
0.49
0.48
Black(
0,1)
0.07
0.07
0.08
0.06
0.10
0.08
0.09
0.08
Asian(0,1)
0.
04
0.
08
0.05
0.05
0.
06
0.
08
0.08
0.07
Hispanic(0,1)
0.
04
0.
06
0.05
0.03
0.07
0.09
0.10
0.09
Amer.
Indian(0,1)
0.01
0.01
0.01
0.01
0.01
0.01
0.01
0.01
Parent
English(0,1)
0.
94
0.
88
0.92
0.94
0.
89
0.
86
0.85
0.87
H.S.Diploma(0,1)
0.
99
0.
98
0.99
0.99
0.
99
0.
98
0.98
0.98
Transfe
r(0,1)
0.05
0.06
0.06
0.06
0.00
0.00
0.00
0.00
Urban
(0,1)
0.24
0.26
0.27
0.24
0.
32
0.
28
0.33
0.3
Rural(
0,1)
0.
45
0.
33
0.
36
0.
43
0.
29
0.
16
0.
16
0.
21
Private
(0,1)
0.16
0.18
0.19
0.18
0.
24
0.
32
0.
33
0.
28
%
Atte
ndingCollege(6categories)
4.35
4.41
4.40
4.39
4.
56
4.
93
4.
96
4.
77
StateR
eq.Civ.Ed.(0,1)
0.
51
0.
35
0.41
0.42
0.
74
0.
41
0.59
0.59
TableA-2:BalanceStatisticsforMatche
dandUnmatchedData.
Numbersinboldindicatetha
tthedifference
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