In 2010, when Robert McClure stepped down as Chapple Family Professor of Citizenship and Democracy to begin a phased retirement, a natural choice to be his successor was his political science colleague Kristi Andersen.
The primary responsibility of the Chapple Professor is directing the interdisciplinary, team-taught MAX Courses, which explore citizenship and current public issues. Andersen began teaching MAX 123, Critical Issues for the United States, in 2007, and helped create the MAX Course on quantitative methods.
 Kristi Andersen
Now in her third year as Chapple Professor, Andersen works with the diverse MAX Course teaching teams to identify the critical issues and debates that will be the focus each year — such as the electoral process, health care reform, education, and Social Security. One of the current topics in MAX 123 is immigration, which ties in with Andersen's recent research on immigrant political incorporation — the subject of her book New Immigrant Communities: Finding a Place in Local Politics.
Popular among undergraduates for nearly two decades, the MAX Courses now also serve as a foundation for the new citizenship and civic engagement major. The citizenship component is evident in the courses on U.S. and global public issues, but Andersen sees the quantitative methods MAX Course, too, as essentially about citizenship.
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