Second in a
Series
High
school kids give election information
Sarah
Beetz
|
Lindbergh High
senior Sarah Beetz was at Sappington Elementary to tell the
kids about our country's election process. She ended up talking
about her birthday.
The Lindbergh
student was on one of several 3-person teams participating
in the statewide Kids Voting 2004 program. The University
of Missouri-St. Louis administers the program, which is used
in many schools every two years.
This is the first
year the Lindbergh School District has participated in Kids
Voting. You can learn more by clicking on www.umsl.edu/services/kidsvoting.
(Young Saint
Louis.com ran its first Kids Voting 2004 story last month.
A third story in December will cover the statewide kids voting
results in Missouri.)
Abbey
Schumacher
|
About her Sappington
experience, Sarah said, "We got off the track a little
when we got on the subject of my birthday." She had been
telling them about the qualifications for voting, including
the minimum age.
One kid asked
Sarah how old she was. That turned out to be a pretty good
question because Sarah will be 18 before the November 2 elections.
That means, unlike
many of her fellow students, Sarah can vote in the Missouri
general elections. The state's minimum voting age is 18.
About her feelings
on the presidential race, she said, "I'll be voting for
(President George) Bush. I believe in striking at enemies
before they strike us," she said. She was referring to
the preemptive U.S. attack on Iraq.
Lindbergh junior
Abbey Schumacher was on a team that explained the voting at
Crestwood Elementary. Her views on election issues differ
sharply from Sarah's.
Andrew
Garner
|
At Lindbergh,
she's a member of Students for Kerry and Amnesty International.
Although she's
only 16, she thinks she may be able to deliver one adult vote
for John Kerry. She said, "My sister and I share the
same political views. I think my dad with vote for Bush. But,
my sister and I are still working on our mother."
Abbey said some
of her election discussions with the elementary kids "didn't
always go in the directions we wanted. Sometimes we had to
reel them back in."
However, she said
one elementary kid was very knowledgeable about the 2000 president
election. "He talked all about the problems in Florida
and everything," she added.
Michelle
Manley
|
Senior Andrew
Garner was on a team that went to Kennerly Elementary School.
In 1993, he transferred to Kennerly "when we were flooded
out of our home in Illinois."
The family has
lived in the Lindbergh district ever since.
He said the Kennerly
kids "were happy when older kids came in. We even went
on recess with them."
One of the Kennerly
kids asked the high school visitors to explain the difference
between Republicans and Democrats. Andrew said, "We tried
to show them the line between liberals and conservatives."
But, he added,
"They also asked us a lot of questions about what it's
like in high school."
Senior Michelle
Manley was another Lindbergh student who went back to her
elementary school. She was on a team that went to Truman Elementary.
Jake
Buerke
|
Seventeen-year-old
Michelle said she talked to six different classes. She said
the elementary kids seemed interested, especially the 5th
graders. "The older kids had watched more news and knew
more about elections," she said.
Michelle said
her team had a "secret weapon" to keep the kids
interested in their discussions. She said, "We asked
questions and gave candy to those who had the right answers."
Junior Jake Buerke
was on another team that went to Crestwood Elementary. He
said the young kids showed a lot of interest in the election
talks.
"We tried
to put our lessons on their level," the 17-year-old said.
For instance, they explained elections in terms of kids making
a decision with a show of hands.
Jake said, "Some
of the younger kids didn't know that that's how our country
is run."
He said he and
his father discuss politics quite a bit. The discussions cover
such things as missile defense and whether we should be in
Iraq.
However, he admits,
"If I could vote, I wouldn't know who I would vote for."
Most of the Lindbergh
kids said their primary voting interest was in the presidential
race. Abbey Schumacher said they governor candidates don't
talk much about the issues. "They are just mean to each
other in their ads," she said.