Governor Ron DeSantis released the results of Florida’s 2022 civics assessments today, demonstrating the success of Florida’s approach to educating its students on the history of our country, the exceptional nature of our form of government, and their role as citizens of our republic. He also announced that the Florida Civics and Debate Initiative will be expanded to all school districts for the upcoming school year, and that 2,500 teachers will participate in three-day civics professional development trainings by the end of July.
All of this comes as Congress considers the misleadingly titled “Civics Secures Democracy Act,” which would allow the Biden Administration to buy off states with $6 billion in exchange for sacrificing American History for Critical Race Theory and other Biden-inspired political whims of the day.
- Statewide, nearly three quarters of students scored at or above Level 3 in Civics in 2022, an increase of five percentage points from 2021.
- U.S. History end of course (EOC) assessment performance increased by two percentage points.
- From 2021 to 2022, all student subgroups increased or maintained performance at Level 3 and above in social studies. African American students had the largest increases in both social studies and science performance.
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- African American students increased performance by eight percentage points in Civics and four percentage points in U.S. History.
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- Economically disadvantaged students increased performance by seven percentage points in Civics and two percentage points in U.S. History.
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- Hispanic students increased performance by six percentage points in Civics and three percentage points in U.S. History.
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- Students with disabilities increased performance by five percentage points in Civics and one percentage point in U.S. History.
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- White students increased performance by three percentage points in Civics and maintained performance in U.S. History.
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- English language learners increased performance by two percentage points in Civics and U.S. History.
- Between 2021 and 2022, the achievement gap between white and African American students narrowed on all social studies assessments and the achievement gap also narrowed between white and Hispanic students on all social studies assessments.