Concept in Definition ABC
Miscellanea / / July 04, 2021
By Cecilia Bembibre, in Nov. 2010
The term civic is an adjective that is used to refer to different issues related to civility or coexistence social within a community. Normally, the term is used to adjective certain types of patterns ('civic guidelines') of behavior, as well as certain types of knowledge that fall within the known school subject What education civic or civic instruction (although there are many more variants).
The word civic comes from the concept of citizen. A citizen is a person who is considered to be in a mature stage sufficiently developed to act consciously and responsibly within society. Normally, children and adolescents fall outside this category, which then includes all the rest of the population. population of a community. Then, civic will be everything that has to do with citizens and with the scope of the city especially, a place where the concept of citizen is considered to be born.
In this sense, civic education is a type of education that focuses on the study and understanding of what is considered socially accepted; all those guidelines that contribute to social coexistence and that have to do with the
I respect of the different human rights as well as with the fulfillment of the social obligations that each citizen has.Although civic education is one of the most battered and least considered school subjects, in reality it is the one that perhaps has greater direct link with reality (a characteristic that may be lacking in many other school subjects and for which they are review). In civic education or instruction, students should learn and know data of great importance such as how a society is composed, what are the rights and obligations of those who compose it, what is the family, what is the group of friends, what types of ties exist within a society, the different forms of government and the ways that each citizen has to actively participate not only in politics if not also in many more spectra related to society.
Topics in Civics