Ostensibly [Civics classes] exist as a last-ditch effort to teach the basics of how the government and political system works to high-schoolers before they're released into the wild, but at least where I went to school it was mostly low-intensity indoctrination.
I find the concept uncomfortable, as seemingly practiced.
An interesting take, though I don't know if this was during a Civics/equivalent class or for some reason during a different subject (maths, plausibly?) but a friend of mine's kid (so the tale came through the friend, who may be possibly an unreliable narrator with an agenda) who was part of a group asked by a teacher shortly before the 2015 UK elections who their parents would be voting for. I already have a problem with that. The children may not know, they may know wrong, the parent(s) may not want anyone to know, the
child may not want anyone to know what they know...
No problems in this case. The answer in this case was readily "UKIP" , to the apparent shock (and maybe derision) of the others in the class and teacher. As reported, the question was then asked
why the vote for UKIP? And seemingly not as a general follow-up given to everyone, but specifically to this apparent bombshell revelation.
I'm no fan of UKIP*, but no-one should be asked
why a vote for UKIP in such a manner. Even though I know my friend's whole family enough to know that they'd definitely favour the situation that they question "why
not UKIP?" might be dominant.
Still, I don't lay the blame at the school or the national curriculum or the government of the day. I mean, it's not like we have a system where our schoolkids are expected to stand for the flag every morning and idolise some a nationalistic ideal by reciting an oath. If you
have to perform such rituals (or be mocked, even threatened, for deciding not doing so) then could you even trust those who do to properly feel that sense of community? I bet in any such land there are plenty more fakers or blind hypocrites than there are the more obvious refuseniks against such a system of nationalistic dictatorship. Whatever my friend may think, I'm glad that our democratic system isn't so stacked towards officially prescribed thoughts.
I never had a Civics class, myself, decades ago as it would have been had it were, but I'd like to think that it should be run like my RE classes. Thanks to some choice or other of teachers, Religious Education, for me, was more like what I think now is termed "Comparative Religions". Covering (bits of) many things from Babylonian and Egyptian practices through up into the obvious Abrahamic ones and also touching upon the many remaining from the Indian sub-continent. Not much detail from the various amerindian/worldwide-aboriginal sides of things, barely anything in the direction of Shinto and I think the likes of Confucianism was omitted. But we only had three to five years of one class a week.
Given a grounding in the various systems, it provided context for how (in my context agnostically-atheistically) I interacted with the background Anglican/CofE aspects of life. Being in the Scouting movement, compulsory recital of The Lord's Prayer**, attendance of saints' days parades, November 11th and (increasingly optional/avoidable) carol services were probably my only involvement with the non-secular world other than the far more intermittent weddings/baptisms/funerals, but I definitely feel I could hold my own.
And better than anyone indoctrinated into something like a Seventh-day-adventist-and-every-third-Thursday-in-the-church-hall-there's-a-jumble-sale-and-jam'N'pickle-stall creed.
So equip similarly for the civic side of things?
* Personally, I am of the opinion that if Britain loses any of its mythical 'sovereignty', actual world credibility and/or the use of the pound sterling to a regional or global shakeup within the next quarter of the century that it will be establishable that UKIP is a major reason. By their avowed attempts to save all three they may actually provoke their loss, through a myriad of new itches that need scratching and the disturbing of uneasy checks and balances.
** It's just words as far as I'm concerned. I chose to say them, like many of my peers, and it made us neither better nor worse than we might otherwise be, for all that.