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Civic socialization in public and fundamentalist schools

Publication ,  Journal Article
Godwin, RK; Godwin, JW; Martinez-Ebers, V
Published in: Social Science Quarterly
December 1, 2004

Critics of schools governed by fundamentalist religions are concerned that these schools will not socialize students to the attitudes and values appropriate for citizens of a pluralistic liberal democracy. Among these values are support for democratic norms, political tolerance, moral reasoning and autonomy, duty to community, and acceptance of nontraditional lifestyles. This article examines the empirical basis for the critics' concerns. Methods. Using difference-of-means tests and multivariate regression, we compare students in the 10th and 12th grades attending regular public and fundamentalist Christian schools. Results. The lOth-grade comparisons of the two sets of students confirm many of the expectations of critics of fundamentalist schools. By the 12th grade, however, the students in fundamentalist schools have surpassed students in regular public schools on many of the desired attitudes and values, but the fundamentalist school students remain less accepting of nontraditional lifestyles. Conclusion. For the most part, fundamentalist Christian high schools do as well or better than regular public schools in socializing their students to the values appropriate to citizenship in liberal democracies.

Duke Scholars

Published In

Social Science Quarterly

DOI

ISSN

0038-4941

Publication Date

December 1, 2004

Volume

85

Issue

5 SPEC. ISS.

Start / End Page

1097 / 1111

Related Subject Headings

  • General Arts, Humanities & Social Sciences
 

Citation

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Godwin, R. K., Godwin, J. W., & Martinez-Ebers, V. (2004). Civic socialization in public and fundamentalist schools. Social Science Quarterly, 85(5 SPEC. ISS.), 1097–1111. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.0038-4941.2004.00265.x
Godwin, R. K., J. W. Godwin, and V. Martinez-Ebers. “Civic socialization in public and fundamentalist schools.” Social Science Quarterly 85, no. 5 SPEC. ISS. (December 1, 2004): 1097–1111. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.0038-4941.2004.00265.x.
Godwin RK, Godwin JW, Martinez-Ebers V. Civic socialization in public and fundamentalist schools. Social Science Quarterly. 2004 Dec 1;85(5 SPEC. ISS.):1097–111.
Godwin, R. K., et al. “Civic socialization in public and fundamentalist schools.” Social Science Quarterly, vol. 85, no. 5 SPEC. ISS., Dec. 2004, pp. 1097–111. Scopus, doi:10.1111/j.0038-4941.2004.00265.x.
Godwin RK, Godwin JW, Martinez-Ebers V. Civic socialization in public and fundamentalist schools. Social Science Quarterly. 2004 Dec 1;85(5 SPEC. ISS.):1097–1111.
Journal cover image

Published In

Social Science Quarterly

DOI

ISSN

0038-4941

Publication Date

December 1, 2004

Volume

85

Issue

5 SPEC. ISS.

Start / End Page

1097 / 1111

Related Subject Headings

  • General Arts, Humanities & Social Sciences