Democratic education now sits at the center of a growing debate in South Korea, as teachers and parents clash over whether the 2024 martial law crisis belongs in the classroom. The question gained urgency after many students demanded explanations when then-President Yoon Suk Yeol abruptly announced martial law last December.
Teachers like Han Yu-ra responded immediately. She teaches history in Gwangmyeong and quickly prepared a presentation to explain the unfolding situation. Her slides reached thousands of educators overnight and ignited a nationwide conversation. Han said many students showed strong interest in understanding the constitutional implications and historical context.
Another teacher, Kim Soo-hyun, observed intense student engagement. However, she also noticed memes, online narratives and polarized interpretations circulating among teenagers. She explained that confusion, humor and political analysis often appeared side by side in class discussions.
As the conversation expanded, political neutrality surfaced as the core tension. South Korea’s education law requires neutrality to prevent partisan influence. However, many teachers argue the interpretation has become excessively restrictive. They say the guideline now prevents them from teaching ongoing political events, even when the curriculum requires constitutional understanding.
Han said backlash forced many educators to self-censor. She received online threats after using the term “insurrection” in her materials. She believes misinterpretation of neutrality prevents meaningful democratic education and keeps schools silent during major national crises.
Parents remain divided. Some believe teaching the martial law crisis risks political bias and unnecessary conflict among students. Others argue that schools must help students process anxiety, disinformation and civic responsibility. One parent said that public institutions are the only reliable setting for learning democratic values because many adults never received similar education.
Experts warn that online spaces already shape young political identities. Professor Seong Gi-seon said far-right radicalization is increasing among teenagers, especially boys. He believes schools must actively teach media literacy and constitutional values to counter rising misinformation.
Teachers expect the martial law crisis to eventually appear in textbooks. They want instruction to focus on systems and civic responses rather than individual politicians. They hope lessons encourage ethical reflection, critical thinking and responsible citizenship.
Going forward, many educators call for legal reform. They believe teachers need protection if they teach political events factually. They argue that democratic education cannot function if teachers fear consequences for explaining real-world events.
Ultimately, the debate continues as classrooms, homes and policymakers navigate how to teach politics without politicizing students. Yet many educators insist one point remains clear: democratic education cannot exist without discussing democracy in practice.

