The Renaissance of Student Activism
There has been a real powerful sense ... that the future they were promised has been taken away from them.
by ALIA WONG
Maybe the campus protests seemed rather isolated at first. Dissatisfaction with the administration. Outrage over bad decisions. A student altercation gone bad.
For example: The protest at Florida State University last fall, when students didnt like the idea of having the Republican state politician John Thrasher as their schools president and launched a campaign#SlashThrasheragainst his candidacy. Citing the lawmakers corporate ties, various groups staged demonstrations, including some who organized a march to the city center.
Or the protest at the University of Michigan in September, when, amid frustrations over their football teams losses, students rallied at the home of the schools president to demand that he fire the athletic director. They had more on their minds than lost points: The director had neglected to remove the teams quarterback from a football game after he suffered a serious head injury that was later diagnosed as a concussion. (The Florida students protest failed to change minds at FSU, but Michigans athletic director was quickly sent packing.)
There was the confederate-flag fiasco at Bryn Mawr, which resulted in a mass demonstration by hundreds of students who, all dressed in black, called for an end to racism on the Pennsylvania campus. A week later, more than 350 students staged a similar protest further north, at New Yorks Colgate University. That onedubbed #CanYouHearUsNowlikewise aimed to to end bigotry among students and faculty; it was in part prompted by a series of racist Yik Yak posts.
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http://www.theatlantic.com/education/archive/2015/05/the-renaissance-of-student-activism/393749/?preview=bsAAn9c5Ovlh5RcfPOWQdcmYu6Y&utm_source=SFTwitter