Friday, November 14, 2008

It really was about YOU

As has been said many times now, this recent campaign for president was the first to engage the public with the new medium of the internet. Though the Deane campaign of '04 is often seen as the beginning of this strategy, the Obama campaign used it like never before. YouTube, Facebook, Twitter, etc., made this campaign more about YOU the voter than ever before.

Watch Joe Trippi (Deane '04 campaign manager), Gavin Newsom (S.F. Mayor) and Arianna Huffington (huffingtonpost.com) discuss this development at the recent Web 2.0 conference:

Saturday, November 8, 2008

Passing the Torch to a New Generation

After gaining the youth vote in 1960, John F. Kennedy famously declared in his inaugural address that “the torch has been passed to a new generation of Americans.” This line was delivered partly because Kennedy himself seemed the face of a new generation, but also partly because he had won the youth vote 2 to 1 against his rival Richard Nixon.
Since George McGovern's loss to Nixon in 1972, the youth vote has been tiny - a mere blip on pollsters' computer screens. Any political scientist could tell you that the vote of people 18-29 is now always the smallest of any age group, and they'd further make the point that any politician who could galvanize that group and get them to come to the polls in large numbers would surely win an election. So now that the 2008 election is over, let 's look at the new numbers as provided by The Center for Information and Research on Civic Learning and Engagement (CIRCLE):
Year Youth Voter Turnout Estimated by CIRCLE (18-29) Percentage change since previous election Number of young people who voted in nation
1996 37%
14.5 million
2000 41% +4 16.2 million
2004 48% +7 19.4 million
2008 52-53% +4-5 22.8 - 23.1 million
With a modest increase of 4 or 5 percentage points, young people came to the polls last Tuesday in larger numbers than in any election since 1972. Still, according to the NY Times exit poll data, young voters remained the smallest voting group, accounting for just 18% of the total vote, or the smallest percentage of the four age group categories (18-29, 30-44, 45-59, 60 & older).
But taken alone, this data is misleading. Try this for context: the increase in youth votes accounts for at least 60% of the overall increase in the number of votes [across all age groups], suggesting that this year’s election mobilized young people more than any other group. In other words, young people showed up in 2008.
We can take the youth vote impact even further - according to CIRCLE, young voters favored Barack Obama by more than 2 to 1. Politico.com reports this morning that 66% of voters under age 30 preferred Obama while just 32% favored McCain—nearly four times the size of John F. Kennedy's lead with the group in 1960. Do the math on that and you find that Obama received 7.8 million more 18-29 year old votes than John McCain. Obama's total popular vote margin over McCain? 7.1 million.
From Politico: "In other words, never in post-war American politics have youth voted so differently than older generations as they did in 2008... Obama's lead with the group this year is easily the largest of any newly elected president in the era of modern polling."
At Coretta Scott King's funeral in early 2006, Ethel Kennedy, the widow of Robert Kennedy, leaned over to a fairly new Senator Obama and whispered, "The torch is being passed to you." "A chill went up my spine," Obama later told an aide. On Tuesday, the young voters of America ensured he'll have to run with the torch for the next four years - it had indeed been passed.
Sources:
CIRCLE: http://www.civicyouth.org/
NY Times: http://elections.nytimes.com/2008/results/president/exit-polls.html
Politico: http://www.politico.com/news/stories/1108/15441.html
Newsweek: http://www.newsweek.com/id/167582

Sunday, September 7, 2008

UC Admissions; Affirmative Action

On the off-chance any of you are still checking it to this blog now that you've moved on to college, I thought I'd post a short update on this issue.

The L.A. Times on Sunday 9/7/08 posted a pair of opinion pieces on the new UCLA admission process which the university contends is legal, but critics decry. The process has successfully doubled African-American admission.

Read all about it here:

Pro --> http://www.latimes.com/news/opinion/la-oe-hunt7-2008sep07,0,4419624.story?track=rss

Con --> http://www.latimes.com/news/opinion/la-oe-mac_donald-2008sep07,0,1237273.story

~ MJG

Wednesday, June 4, 2008

It's Over

High School, AP U.S. Gov, and the Primaries. They're all over.

Congratulations to you as you move on to the next stage of your life. Meanwhile, the selection process for the next President of the United States moves on to its next stage. Though it seemed the Democrats might never decide, they figured it out just in time for your graduation.

I wish all the best to you and I hope you'll stay engaged in the process of making our community, country, and the world more just.

Friday, May 30, 2008

Final AP US GOV Update - Policy Project

Seniors,

Your final update for AP U.S. Government & Politics is a reminder about the Policy Project - the last assignment in the "gradebook".

To reiterate what we discussed in class:

1. Choose a general policy area corresponding to the policy chapters in the Wilson text (economic, environmental, social, etc.). Carefully read the chapter with an eye to how politics plays into the process of policy-making. The goal here is to enhance your understanding of why what seems the best policy isn't always what is enacted - politics affects everything!

2. Here's where you have nearly complete flexibility. Choose any specific contemporary policy issue related to your general policy area (e.g. carbon-reduction : environmental policy). This can be something that you noticed during the Current Events Blog Project or simply something about which you're interested. Research a little what is being done policy-wise about your issue.

3. Formulate and produce a statement of position. Essentially you're making a policy recommendation. Again, here you have wide latitude to say whatever you want in the way you want - the only requirement is that it appears on your blog site. It could be written, drawn, spoken (audio/video), whatever. It simply needs to make a policy recommendation. It must be substantive and I expect your recommendations will be robust. In "student-speak", it needs to be as substantial as you might make a statement of position essay in CritComp.

Due Date: I'll be checking your blog at the end of Senior Finals. Please have your policy statement posted by the end of the day on Friday 6/6. If you have questions about the project, email me.

It's been a pleasure working with you this year. All the best to you as you wrap up the year and move on to university study.

Mr. G.

Tuesday, April 29, 2008

It's Coming...

The AP Exam is nearly here. Monday, May 5th will arrive soon enough. Are you reviewing?

We have in-class review Wed, Thur, & Fri this week, as well as after-school sessions on Wed & Fri. Be sure to also set aside your weekend - we're meeting as a group on Saturday at 9am and Sunday at 3pm. See you there!

If for some reason you can't make the out-of-class review sessions, hit the lecture notes page for the outlines and audio/video.

Mr. G

Friday, April 25, 2008

Civil Liberties / Rights WRAPPED!


That's a WRAP for the Civil Liberties/Rights Unit. You better be sure you've read Wilson chapters 18 & 19 by next class. Have detailed notes and be ready for the Mini-Exam!

Recalling our Affirmative Action debate in class, I thought you should see the statistical chart to the left. Keep in mind that after U.C. Regents v. Bakke (1978), Affirmative Action of a sort was the norm at UCLA. In 1998 the first UCLA class affected by CA Prop. 209 (banning race from university admission criteria) was admitted.

And in the event you thought I was exaggerating how lucky you are to be at your private Los Angeles school, check out these statistics in the chart at the right about South L.A. public schools. You can read the full story about students in L.A. public schools here.

UCLA statistics (chart) courtesy of Jeremy VanderKnyff, NPR.
http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=5563891

Wednesday, April 23, 2008

Review Session #1

AP US Gov-ers,

Review Session #1 is in the books. Check out the entire video of the session below. (I'll be doing this for all the sessions, so if you can't make it to them in person, I'd suggest you set aside time to enjoy the reviews online.)

Each Review Session will have handouts of course. You can access these on the website through the "Notes" or "Course Calendar" page.



http://216.101.58.17/hs/mgwaltney/apusgovt/files/AP%20US%20Govt%20Review%201.mov

Monday, March 10, 2008

POTUS

AP US GOV-ers,

You're studying POTUS and you have the daily reading quiz thing starting Wednesday, through Monday. Make sure you're keeping up with the reading!

REMINDER: You should be checking the Course Calendar every day (it changes, so always click Refresh). Note that you have a joint Congress/Presidency Exam right before Spring Break - hit the books!

Eight (8) weeks to the AP Exam.

Mr. G

Monday, March 3, 2008

Congress / Presidency Exam

AP US GOV-ers,

We're combining the Congress and Presidency chapters in Wilson and doing one exam right before Spring Break. Check the updated course calendar (link on the right) for more information!

Keep reading! The AP Exam is only 8 weeks away!

Mr. G

Wednesday, February 20, 2008

READ!!!

Seniors,

We've reached a crucial time in your preparation for the AP Exam. We are doing all three of the big government "institutions" (Congress, Presidency, Courts) over the next 2 months and you absolutely MUST do your part. There's plenty of reading to be done, and if you aren't doing it you're going to be behind. PUH-LEASE double your efforts and keep up with the reading. The reading quizzes will be coming nearly daily to help motivate you. :-)

Reminder: AP Exam registration is due on Friday 2/22.

Mr. G

Friday, February 8, 2008

Kairos is Over, APUSGOV Marches On!

Welcome back from Kairos those of you who were gone - I hope the experience was great.

On Monday 2/11 and Tuesday 2/12, we'll have our Media (Ch. 10) Reading Quiz.

On Wednesday 2/13 and Thursday 2/14, we'll have our Media FRQ Exam. Be ready!

Wednesday, January 30, 2008

2nd Semester, Senior Year & AP US GOV

Students,

You've been waiting to be 2nd Semester Seniors forever, though some of you came down with Senioritis many months before now. Nonetheless, it's here. PLEASE challenge yourself to continue giving the kind of effort being a student requires. I've been through 2nd semester many times before with seniors and I'll do my part to make it as painless as possible, but you have to do your part to keep at it. Deal?

Keep up with the reading! Check the Course Calendar link at the right.

Mr. G.

Tuesday, January 22, 2008

UPDATED End of Semester Notices

AP GOVers - here are your end of semester updates:

1. Study for the Final Exam. As mentioned in class, the exam covers chapters 1-9 and is built the way your Unit Exams were - all former AP Exam questions. Yes, you'll recognize many (or most!) of the questions. Use the Fast Track to a 5 review guides located at the Course Calendar page (http://216.101.58.17/hs/mgwaltney/apusgovt/files/Fast%20Track%20Ch.%207,8,9.pdf). For those of you needing the first and second unit "Fast Tracks", go to the Course Calendar page and scroll to that unit schedule.

2. Blog Wrap-up Assignment. I've decided to extend the "capstone" assignment from the Current Event Blog project into the second semester. More on this to come next week.

3. Grades. They'll be posted online by Monday or Tuesday. If you really need to know before then, email or come see me.

Mr. G.