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Hi all,
In an extraordinarily tight presidential race, there’s reason to feel hopeful about a generation of voters who have historically voted in low proportions. Among Americans ages 18 to 24, including many high school and college students, the rate of voting is now rising to unprecedented levels.
In recent years, this group voted at rates significantly below the rest of the population, but as Jon Marcus points out in a new story that also appeared in the Christian Science Monitor and Teen Vogue, they say they are planning to vote, propelled by issues that directly affect them: climate change, the economy, reproductive and LGBTQ+ rights, student loan debt and gun safety.
“All of our lives are at risk — our futures — and the lives of our neighbors, the lives of our friends,” one New Jersey student told Marcus.
This week, we also write about how young people both need and want to learn about the ways the world around them is changing, bring you examples of success and resilience following pandemic learning loss, and explore how climate change is changing the way some teachers teach. What gives you hope? We want to know: Hit reply to this email and tell us.
Liz Willen, Editor
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Main Idea
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After growing up with mass shootings, restrictions on reproductive rights, student loan debt and other issues that affect them, rates of voting by young people have quietly been rising to unprecedented levels, despite their lifetimes of watching government gridlock and attempts in some states to make it harder for them to vote.
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A message from this week's sponsor:
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The EGF Accelerator is supporting strong leaders in sustainable nonprofits that are working to improve the education and life outcomes for low-income New Yorkers. We offer incubation, advanced leadership development, a remote Fellows program, and fund journalism about educational equity. Want to know more? Drop us a line. [email protected].
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Reading List
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⭐ Extra credit! We offer most of our stories under a noncommercial Creative Commons license. What does that mean? You are allowed to repost or reprint our stories as long as you follow these guidelines. Questions? Email Nichole Dobo, our Director of Audience Development at [email protected].
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Recognizing that students need to know more about climate change than just the science, dozens of federal agencies released a major new guide on ‘climate literacy,’ and one state, Colorado, inaugurated a ‘seal of climate literacy’ for high school diplomas
Nonprofit counts more than 1,300 U.S. schools where students beat the odds
Learning through math stories helps children better understand and remember math concepts
Study finds ‘opportunity gap’ between rich and poor children can come down to just six missed chances
More than 40 million Americans have student loan debt. But should the government forgive all or even or part of it? That debate has become a surprising source of political division
Some schools that serve high percentages of low-income students are doing much better than expected
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