Early Sparks
(1900s-1940s)
Fighting for Education (1950s-1960s)
Voices for Justice (1960s-1970s)
New Generations Rise
(2000s-Present)
Know Your Leaders
100

In 1903, this event exposed child labor abuses when 10,000 young textile workers went on strike for better pay and shorter hours.

What is the March of the Mill Children?

100

Two 16-year-olds led a walkout from Robert Russa Moton High School to protest unequal conditions in Farmville, Virginia.

Who are Barbara Johns and John Arthur Stokes?

100

Mary Beth and John Tinker wore black armbands to school to protest this war.

What is the Vietnam War?

100

Massive 2006 protests opposed harsh immigration laws and included 40,000 students walking out in this city.

What is Los Angeles?

100

She was only 13 when she helped define student free speech in Tinker v. Des Moines.

Who is Mary Beth Tinker?

200

In 1940, this group of young Black organizers fought for voting rights by protesting the poll tax across the South.

What is the Southern Negro Youth Congress (SNYC)?

200

This 1957 event tested the Brown v. Board of Education decision when nine Black students integrated Central High.

What is the Little Rock Nine?

200

The Supreme Court ruled in Tinker v. Des Moines that students do not “shed their rights” where?

Where are public schools?

200

The proposed DREAM Act would have provided what for undocumented youth?

What is a pathway to legal status?

200

This young leader’s 1951 school protest became part of the Brown v. Board case.

Who is Barbara Johns?

300

These 400 juvenile workers marched from Pennsylvania coal mines to Theodore Roosevelt’s home in protest of child labor.

Who were the juvenile coal miners from the March of the Mill Children?

300

In 1960, four Black college students refused to leave a segregated Woolworth’s lunch counter in this city.

What is Greensboro, North Carolina?

300

The 1968 East Los Angeles “Blowouts” protested discrimination against this group of students.

Who are Mexican-American students?

300

After Trayvon Martin’s death, this movement was founded by Alicia Garza, Patrisse Cullors, and Opal Tometi.

What is Black Lives Matter?

300

These four students started the sit-in movement in Greensboro, North Carolina.

Who are Joseph McNeil, Franklin McCain, Ezell Blair Jr., and David Richmond?

400

SNYC’s “National Anti-Poll Tax Week” raised awareness about this major barrier preventing Black Southerners from voting.

What is the poll tax?

400

Inspired by Greensboro, students in this city staged a 3-month sit-in campaign that led to local desegregation.

What is the Nashville Sit-In Movement?

400

The slogan “Old enough to fight, old enough to vote” led to this constitutional change.

What is the 26th Amendment?

400

This youth-led group fights for a Green New Deal and against fossil fuel influence.

What is the Sunrise Movement?

400

This slogan, “Old enough to fight, old enough to vote,” was championed by activists demanding this reform.

What is lowering the voting age to 18?

500

The SNYC’s work in cities like Durham and Raleigh showed early examples of youth building power through this civic action.

What is voting and labor organizing?

500

Thousands of students marched from a Birmingham church in 1963, facing police dogs and fire hoses.

What is the Children’s Crusade?

500

The East L.A. Walkouts were organized by the EICC, which stood for what?

What is the Educational Issues Coordinating Committee?

500

In 2018, students from this Florida high school launched the March For Our Lives campaign.

What is Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School (Parkland)?

500

These three women are credited with launching one of the most influential racial justice movements of our time.

Who are Alicia Garza, Patrisse Cullors, and Opal Tometi?