Students are learning how important it is to exercise your right to vote, especially when so many have been denied the right for so long.

Ms. Tieger鈥檚 fourth grade classroom is adorned with bright decorations and color-splashed desks. It is a warm space in which to learn. Among the posters and chart paper containing promises for the year ahead is a sign that reads, 鈥淧lease Vote On the 3rd鈥 and an array of Time for Kids magazine covers related to social justice and the United States government. Most days, you can walk by and see an interactive 2020 Electoral Map on the SmartBoard with its red-to-blue gradient. 

In the weeks leading up to Election Day, Ms. Tieger designed a project centered around the history of voting rights in the United States to encourage her students to better understand the power of a vote. 

Students are learning how important it is to exercise your right to vote, especially when so many have been denied the right for so long鈥攁nd many still are,鈥 shares Ms. Tieger. 鈥淲e identified and explored which groups have always had the right to vote, as well as groups that have had to fight for the same right.鈥 

As a way to synthesize their findings, they created a digital timeline beginning in 1789 when only 6% of Americans could vote
鈥攚hite, Christian, land-owning men who were over the age of 21. The timeline progresses and captures important milestones and modifications to the United States voting system up through this year鈥檚 election.

LEARN:  

What do Ms. Tieger鈥檚 students want you to learn from their digital timeline? They explain, 鈥淚t is our hope that we will encourage everyone who can to vote on or before November 3rd because so many people had to fight for this important right.鈥 

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