The walk-outs by thousands of high
school students on Wednesday did more than call attention to a revamping of the
nation’s gun laws, they also provided Americans with several other things.
A wake-up call.
A civics lesson.
And a realization that high school
students today are doing what high school students did when I was in high
school -- speak up and demand to be heard.
When Baby Boomers were in high
school, we were dealing with Vietnam, equal rights for women and the lowering
of the voting age from 21 to 18.
Vietnam was popular with very few
people while the Equal Rights Amendment (ERA) and the lowering of the voting
age in Illinois via Project 18, sparked divisive debates across generations.
The murders of students by gunfire
appears to be no different as they seem to be awakening a generation that has
discovered it has a voice that needs to be heard.
Parents, politicians and school
administrators need to listen.
Buffalo Grove’s two high schools
allowed students to participate in the March, although in different ways.
Students gather at Buffalo Grove High School to speak out against gun violence |
Buffalo Grove High School allowed
students to congregate only near the main entrance. The entire campus was off
limits to anyone with one security office saying it was because the march was a
“school event,” which make no sense. Neither does the comment by another
security officer who said I wouldn’t be allowed to take pictures because many
of the students were minors.
The district’s official position, said
Jennifer Delgado, communications supervisor for District 214 was “the
District decided to restrict access to our campuses for a brief period this
morning to ensure the safety and security of our students during this morning's
walkout. The decision to briefly restrict access is also in line with how most
schools in the Chicagoland area handled the nationwide walkouts.”
Delgado
added that “These displays were student-led and peaceful, and our student
leaders did a phenomenal job making sure everyone was back in the building when
the 17 minutes were over.”
Spoken like a true flack.
It’s interesting that she said, “The
decision to briefly restrict access” was “in line with how most schools in the
Chicagoland area handled the nationwide walkouts.”
Guess Stevenson has been annexed by Kenosha.
According to District 125 spokesman Jim
Conrey, “We had an estimated 2,000 students
participate in the walkout (today). We reached agreement with the student
organizers to have an organized march starting from the "circle
drive" entrance and heading south along the building to the Garden of
Peace, Hope and Remembrance. From there, students walked into the alley behind
the school building to go back inside and return to class. The walkout went off
without incident.”
While the school blocked its entrance on
Illinois Rt. 22 (Half Day Road), access was available through its Port Clinton
Road entrance.
The need for tight security is understandable.
The display of officers from the Buffalo Grove Police Department at BGHS was
unprecedented for a “school event” – even the truck enforcement officer was
there.
By limiting students -- as many districts did
– including one which allegedly told students they could march if they didn’t say
anything political, are educators limiting the opportunity for students to
become civically engaged?
Downers Grove District 99 reportedly issued
nearly 1,000 detentions to students who were brazen enough to participate in
marches at Downers Grove North and South high schools. The detentions, according to one media
report, will be in an auditorium where there will be conversations about gun
violence.
A nice gesture, but what is the result of
these conversations? Student voices need to be continuously heard in public, by
the public and by lawmakers – not just by school administrators who are bent on
control issues.
What goes around comes around as it did in the
Vietnam era of the 1960s. Students at the collegiate and scholastic levels were
relentless in their actions and messages. Today’s students need have that same
relentlessness and resiliency so their concerns become actions in the nation’s
statehouses and in Washington, D.C.
People – whether students or not – need make
sure their voices are continually
heard and not silenced by overzealous school administrators or PAC-induced
lawmakers.
People’s voices, not silence, will make a
difference.
But only if people listen and act before it’s
too late. Again.
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