Cultivate Informed Patriots by Focusing on Teachers 

Impact: Ashbrook Center

The Ashbrook Center’s teacher education program has hosted over 900 programs for thousands of teachers, which has grown their network to over 30,000 teachers nationwide.

A Conversation with Jeffrey Sikkenga, Executive Director of the Ashbrook Center


Q: What is the mission of the Ashbrook Center? What problem(s) in civics education is your nonprofit working to solve?

We were inaugurated in 1983 by President Ronald Reagan. For the last 40 years, our mission has been to strengthen self-government in America by educating our fellow citizens in the history and founding principles of the country. As we like to say, we’re in the freedom business. The biggest problem that we’re trying to solve is keeping the American experiment in self-government alive by cultivating informed patriots: Students, teachers, citizens, people who love our country because they understand why it’s lovable.


Q: Does your organization have any upcoming programs or events planned in recognition of the 250th anniversary of the United States? 

Ashbrook’s TeachingAmericanHistory.org is an essential resource for teachers nationwide. The site draws millions of visitors each year to its vast online library, which contains over 3,600 primary source documents, core documents and concise history volumes, American history toolkits, online exhibits and archived webinars. 

To commemorate America’s 250th anniversary, Ashbrook is creating a special exhibit on the Declaration of Independence as part of a new classroom resource designed to bring American history to life for students. The new digital atlas uses interactive animation to show the development of American history and government through time. More than a map, it reveals America’s exceptional story through annotated photos, charts, graphs, dynamic timelines and video and audio excerpts of speeches covering every major era. 

The first five exhibits launched on July 4, 2025, and include the Constitutional Convention, the Cold War, Contested Elections, World War I and the 1920s, and Slavery and Religion. 

  • The special exhibit on the Declaration of Independence will be completed in time for the 250th celebration. Additional exhibits planned for release in the coming year include Freedom of Speech, Freedom of Religion, Westward Expansion, Slavery and Its Consequences and America in the Age of the Vietnam War. 
  • The 250th anniversary will also be the focus of a special weekend event in April 2026. In preparation for the celebration, Ashbrook is inviting Director’s Club members to join us in Charlottesville, Virginia, for “Freedom 250: Thomas Jefferson and the Legacy of the Declaration of Independence.” The weekend will include a tour of Monticello, the home Thomas Jefferson designed, redesigned, built and rebuilt over more than 40 years. 

Through these specific initiatives—the special exhibit on the Declaration of Independence and the weekend-long event focused on the author of this seminal document—and more broadly through all of our educational programs, Ashbrook will honor America’s 250th anniversary by equipping students, teachers and citizens with a deep understanding of America’s founding principles and their enduring legacy. 


Q: How do you describe the big goals the Ashbrook Center is working to achieve? How do you measure impact?

We have three “buckets” of programs: students, teachers and citizens. In each bucket, we measure our results qualitatively and quantitatively. Qualitatively, we talk to our participants and conduct evaluations: How did this change your thinking, your understanding of American history and our founding? Quantitatively, we have commissioned several independent data evaluations that queried participants on how our programs impacted them. We found that our programs did change the way teachers teach and students learn American history and civics. It wasn’t just that they got information from us—they actually changed the way they think about America and how they teach America’s history.


Q: What are some of the biggest challenges the Ashbrook Center has experienced in working to accomplish its mission? How did your organization overcome those challenges?

We have outstanding programs, an outstanding mission and outstanding people. I think we’re first class in all of those areas. Our challenge now is to get in front of the right people—people who can help us get participants into our programs and, of course, raise funds. While our programs can be found across the country, our challenge is to raise the funds necessary to scale them further so we can fully engage as many possible students, teachers and citizens nationally as possible. We’ve got a republic to save!


Q: What is the Ashbrook Center’s biggest need? Where can philanthropists help your organization achieve its goals?

On July 4, we launched a two-year, $20 million campaign for America’s 250th anniversary called “Freedom. For the Next 250.” This is really the biggest opportunity area for philanthropists to help Ashbrook advance our mission.

We are looking to raise the support necessary to increase our current programs by 50% and launch three new national initiatives: First, we want to create an Ashbrook School of Civic Education to turn undergraduate students into outstanding teachers of U.S. history and civics. We want the program to be a model that can be replicated across the country to create thousands of teachers who can reach millions of students.

Second, we want to create a Digital Atlas to provide interactive classroom resources that will allow history and civics teachers to get rid of their textbooks and use primary sources to create wonderful conversations with their students, which is really a hallmark of Ashbrook. We aim to make the Digital Atlas available to teachers in every school district in America.

Finally, we want to create a Blueprint for History and Civics that will be a guide to best practices in U.S. history and civics and will be distributed across the country for those who want to support outstanding civic education.


Q: Beyond the Ashbrook Center, where should philanthropists who care about advancing civic knowledge invest their charitable dollars?

Any good civic education organization needs to be built on two fundamental principles. The first is, to quote Thomas Jefferson, “The human mind is free.” Really do education, not indoctrination, and not just transmitting information. The mind must be engaged in thinking freely. That’s what we really need in this country: citizens who have the habits of “reflection and choice,” as The Federalist put it. 

The second principle is that a good civics organization must believe that America is a free country. For Ashbrook that means a country founded on principles of freedom whose history is the story of the struggle to live up to those principles of freedom. There might be organizations who believe that America is fundamentally free or who engage in conversation with students and teachers, but look for organizations that are guided by both. Those organizations will really change civic education.


Q: If you received an increase in funding, how would your organization expand its programming?  

With increased funding, Ashbrook would expand our educational programs, ensuring that the story of America and our founding principles are taught and cherished for the next 250 years.  

This support would allow us to scale our two student programs.  

The Ashbrook Scholar Program prepares undergraduate students with the knowledge, character and judgment essential for principled leadership in a constitutional republic. The Ashbrook Academy, an intensive summer program for high school students, invites young people to discover a deeper understanding and appreciation of America. 

Our in-person and online programs for American history and civics teachers include daylong and multi-day seminars, webinars and graduate courses. With more than 40,000 teachers in the Ashbrook network, each reaching up to 100 students annually, we have the capacity to impact four million young people every year. By engaging more teachers, we can help more young people learn our nation’s history and founding principles. 

Beyond the classroom, Ashbrook serves citizens through public events, The American Idea podcast and its free online MasterClasses that help Americans of all ages grapple with questions that have become ever more important in our country’s life. 

In addition to expanding our existing programs, we aim to launch several new national initiatives, including establishing an Ashbrook School of Civic Education to cultivate an outstanding corps of American history and civics teachers, producing a digital atlas of primary sources to supplement or replace textbooks and creating a comprehensive blueprint for American history and civics education to guide best practices nationwide.

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Contact the Roundtable’s Programs team to learn more about this investment opportunity.

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