Geneva High School Students Bring Civic History to Life Through Veteran Profiles and Declaration Mural
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When students engage with real stories and hands-on projects, something powerful happens in their learning. Geneva High School is putting this principle into action with an innovative civic education initiative that connects students directly to the people and documents that shaped our nation.
TL;DR
Geneva High School received a $5,000 Teaching America250 Awards grant for an innovative civics education project.
Students are creating an interactive Wall of Honor featuring profiles and interviews of student military veterans.
A mural interpreting the Declaration of Independence's Preamble complements the veteran profiles.
The project offers hands-on learning in research, interviewing, and artistic expression.
Similar grants were awarded to teachers in all 50 states plus D.C. for Declaration anniversary projects.
Students Creating Living Tributes to Veterans
Through a $5,000 Teaching America250 Awards grant, Geneva High School students are developing an interactive “Wall of Honor” featuring profiles and interviews of student military veterans. This hands-on project transforms passive history learning into active investigation and storytelling.
The project allows students to practice research skills, develop interview techniques, and build genuine connections with veterans in their community. Rather than reading about civic duty in textbooks, students experience it directly through conversation and documentation.
Complementing the Wall of Honor, students are creating a mural that visually interprets the Preamble to the Declaration of Independence. This artistic expression requires students to deeply analyze foundational American texts while translating abstract principles into visual storytelling.
The Teaching America250 Awards program, administered by the Jack Miller Center, funds one teacher in every state plus Washington, D.C. with $5,000 grants for creative projects celebrating the 250th anniversary of the Declaration of Independence. These initiatives aim to engage students and school communities in meaningful civics education.
Author Quote"
Quote: Students will combine the principles of the Declaration to essential soft skills, such as signing their name, in a school-wide celebration, in order to define their roles as both citizens and young professionals in a historical and practical context. Attribution: Becky Tomaso, Alabama Teaching America250 Award Winner
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Not applicable - no significant bias identified
Why Project-Based Civics Education Matters
Research consistently shows that students learn more deeply when they actively engage with content rather than passively receive information. Project-based civics education develops multiple skill sets simultaneously: research, communication, critical thinking, artistic expression, and historical understanding.
When students interview veterans, they practice listening and empathy while learning personal stories that bring history alive. When they create murals interpreting the Preamble, they must first understand and then creatively communicate foundational democratic principles. These experiences build capabilities that extend far beyond the classroom.
Key Takeaways:
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Grant-Funded Innovation: Geneva High School teacher receives $5,000 Teaching America250 Award for civic education project.
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Multi-Faceted Learning: Students create veteran profiles while developing research, interview, and artistic skills.
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Living History: Project connects students directly with community veterans and foundational American documents.
Building Engaged Citizens for Tomorrow
This type of immersive civics education prepares students for active participation in democratic society. By connecting academic content to real people and meaningful projects, Geneva High School is helping students develop the skills and understanding they need to become informed, engaged citizens.
The combination of oral history collection and artistic interpretation creates multiple pathways for students to connect with civic heritage. Whether through conversation or creativity, students leave this project with deeper understanding and personal investment in America’s democratic traditions.
Author Quote"
Quote: There is nothing more important to me than demonstrating to students that they can be a part of democracy first-hand, and that all voices are welcome to the table. Attribution: Donica Nash, Alaska Teaching America250 Award Winner
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At Learning Success, we believe every child possesses incredible potential waiting to be unlocked. When schools create meaningful, hands-on learning experiences—like the veteran interviews and Declaration mural at Geneva High School—they tap into something powerful: students learn best when they’re actively engaged, not passively receiving information. Our brains change and grow when we take on meaningful challenges. This project gives students exactly that opportunity while building engaged citizens who understand and appreciate our democratic heritage.
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