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Saturday, December 28, 2019

Excused Absences for Protests? Virginia School District Says It's Worth A Try : NPR

Excused Absences for Protests? Virginia School District Says It's Worth A Try : NPR

Virginia School District To Give Students One Day Off Per Year For 'Civic Engagement'


One of the largest school districts in the country is trying something new: Starting next month, students in Fairfax County, Va., can take one day off per school year to engage in political activism.
The plan has its roots in the 2018 shooting at a Parkland, Fla. high school that left 17 dead. In its aftermath came a rise in student activism unlike anything the Fairfax school district had ever seen, Fairfax School Board member Ryan McElveen tells NPR.
"We saw students wanting to take time out of the school day to lead protests and do things of that nature," says McElveen, who proposed the policy to the school board. "We and other school systems around the nation kind of scrambled to figure out how to handle those protests."
The result is a policy that McElveen says is a first in the nation. Students between 7th and 12th grades will get one excused absence per year for a "civic engagement activity." That might consist of attending a protest, or lobbying legislators in Washington or Richmond — anything that could make the students' voices heard. After submitting the form in advance, and checking in at school on the day of the absence, they can be on their way.


"Public education in the United States was founded on the belief that we need to raise our young people to be productive citizens and give back to society," McElveen says. "This is just one way that they can learn the skills that they will need to use later in life, CONTINUE READING: Excused Absences for Protests? Virginia School District Says It's Worth A Try : NPR