The WallBuilders Show
The WallBuilders Show is a daily journey to examine today's issues from a Biblical, Historical and Constitutional perspective. Featured guests include elected officials, experts, activists, authors, and commentators.
The WallBuilders Show
Reclaiming History In American Schools
What if our biggest civic crisis isn’t outrage, but amnesia? We pull on a thread that runs from the Bible’s call to remember through Jefferson and Churchill to the classroom down the street, and it reveals why a nation that forgets its past loses its grip on freedom. This isn’t nostalgia. It’s a practical guide to rebuilding civic competence by teaching history as if it matters to tomorrow’s choices.
We start with the stories that shaped cultures—Josiah’s reform, Stephen’s sweeping retelling—and show how the founders treated history as training for judgment. Then we map the turn that sidelined it: the progressive fixation on “moving on,” the split between the Declaration and the Constitution, and John Dewey’s shift from knowledge transmission to social engineering. When feelings outrank facts and content mastery is mocked as “rote,” students miss the coherent story of rights, duties, and the limits on power that make self-government work.
Data brings the problem into sharp focus. Too many graduates cannot name branches, term lengths, or First Amendment freedoms. NAEP’s history proficiency hovers near the floor, and many states do not even test history at the end of course. We offer concrete fixes: restore end-of-course exams in U.S. history, tie merit pay to civic outcomes, and require standards that teach both the Declaration’s principles and the Constitution’s framework. Inspired by Medal of Honor recipient and governor Joe Foss, we examine the case for using the U.S. citizenship test as a graduation benchmark—raising the floor so every student leaves school fluent in the basics of American government.
We also unpack how a handful of textbook publishers influence what millions of students see, and why state standards committees are a key lever for change. Pair accurate, balanced content with teacher training that respects evidence and narrative, and classrooms can once again form citizens who recognize ambition, detect bad ideas in new clothes, and judge the future by the lessons of the past.
If you care about turning civic apathy into informed engagement, hit play, share this with a parent or teacher, and leave us a review with the one civics question you believe every graduate should answer with confidence.