School Climate & Safety

Parkland Survivors and Other Youth Activists: ‘You’re Going to Listen to Us’ on Gun Violence

By Madeline Will — May 17, 2018 6 min read
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In an emotionally charged session at the Education Writers Association’s national seminar, student activists from Parkland, Fla.; Newtown, Conn.; and Chicago urged the media to keep the national spotlight on gun violence and not let their tragedies fade away.

The young activists—Emma González, David Hogg, Alex King, and Jackson Mittleman—rattled off statistics on gun violence and shared how they became the faces of a national movement in a panel discussion moderated by Education Week Staff Writer Evie Blad at the University of Southern California here on Wednesday. (Video of the hour-long conversation is embedded below.)

“This isn’t just an issue that we care a lot about, this is a part of us now,” said Mittleman, a Newtown High School junior and the co-chairman of the Jr. Newtown Action Alliance. He was 11 years old during the 2012 Sandy Hook shooting that killed 20 children and six educators. “You’re doing it for the people who aren’t here anymore, ... you’re doing it so people will never again have to experience what you did. ... We’re always going to keep pushing [to] ignite youth to speak up and use their voices.”

In fact, several young activists will spend the summer “bouncing around from community to community” to have conversations about how to prevent gun violence, said González, a senior at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School, where a gunman killed 17 people on February 14.

The conversations will be with “young people who need to have their voices empowered because for so long, they’ve been squished down,” she said.

The first stop on the tour will be Chicago on June 15, said King, a senior at North Lawndale College Prep High School there.

King is a member of the Peace Warriors, a group that offers support to students who have lost a loved one to gun violence. King, whose 16-year-old nephew was shot and killed a year ago, said the Peace Warriors have met with 160 students at North Lawndale this school year.

“I have to do this [activism work] because a life lost is a life lost,” he said. “I know the type of person I am—if I get on board, I can get a lot more people on board.”

This type of advocacy is critical to holding politicians accountable, because it makes sure they don’t forget victims’ stories, said Hogg, a senior at Stoneman Douglas High School who along with González is one of the most publicly visible activists from the Parkland school.

While the shooting was taking place at his school, Hogg recorded some of his classmates on video talking about how they were feeling during the lockdown. “If we did die in that classroom, I was hoping that our voices would carry on even if our souls wouldn’t,” he told the audience.

For too long, the student activists said, efforts to prevent gun violence have failed to lead to significant changes, such as tighter gun controls. But young people refuse to “bite [their] tongues,” King said: Teenagers are committed to making change.

When asked by an audience member how they had become so confident and articulate on these issues, González was quick to answer: “What I love is that people sent us to high school so we could learn stuff and then are amazed that we paid attention,” she said.


The day of the shooting, González said she had been learning about special interest groups and the National Rifle Association in class. During an emotional speech at a gun control rally in Florida that went viral in the days after the shooting, she held up her AP Government notes. She had planned to reference the Supreme Court case Tinker v. Des Moines, which affirmed students’ constitutional rights to free speech, but she couldn’t read her notes through her tears, González said.

Hogg, also a senior at Stoneman Douglas High School, said he had done extensive research on gun violence before the shooting happened for his speech and debate class.

“We’ve always been this way,” he told the room of reporters. “You guys are just listening now.”

‘A Universal Conversation’

In the days after the shooting in Parkland, King and some of his fellow activists from Chicago flew down to Florida to meet with the teen survivors. The students have since been trying to expand the conversation past school shootings to encompass gun violence of all kinds.

“It’s a universal conversation. Adults were looking at this in a single-faceted way. Nobody was addressing the whole problem,” González said. “Everybody’s getting hurt by this. It’s not just schools. If you just address schools, Las Vegas is still happening. So is Charleston. We can’t let that happen.”

The students are pushing for measures like universal background checks, prohibiting the purchase semi-automatic weapons, and imposing stricter federal laws against weapons. They also want more mental health and trauma counselors in schools.

Hogg said too often, people’s attitude toward the gun violence occurring in major cities is, “that happens there, we can’t do anything about it.” He was disturbed that only when a shooting happened in a suburb—Parkland is a mostly white, affluent community—did people start paying more attention.

For the students, “it was common sense” that they include activists from Chicago and other cities where gun violence is so commonplace, González said.

Hogg echoed: “It shouldn’t be surprising that we did that—it should be expected that we do that.”

What’s Next

Beyond the summer listening tour, the activists are figuring out their next steps, especially as many of them will graduate from high school this spring. They all said they feel a sense of responsibility to continue this work. Hogg, for instance, said he is taking a gap year before college to continue his advocacy.

He’s currently working on passing a bill through Congress that would address some of the issues. If it doesn’t pass, Hogg said, he will work to vote those legislators out of office. Part of that is through harnessing student activism. On May 29, Hogg said, high schools across the country will be registering students to vote through HeadCount, a nonpartisan voting organization.

Meanwhile, Mittleman said he wants to continue the conversations about what happened at Sandy Hook Elementary and other places. For a while, people in Newtown found the shooting too painful to discuss. Now, he said, they’re starting to talk about it again.

“You need to find the right time to talk about it,” Mittleman said. Still, “we don’t want to be defined by this tragedy.”

When he tells someone where he’s from, Mittleman added, he sees the look in their eyes. “I don’t want to have a tattoo of tragedy and sadness.”

It’s important to not normalize gun violence, King said. Too often in Chicago, he said, people don’t talk about those who were killed by guns. “I’m here to bring those names out of the shadows,” he said.

The activists all said they feel a sense of responsibility to their friends, relatives, and peers who died to keep telling their stories.

“You can’t let it fade away. It’s not something that should be insignificant to anyone,” Mittleman said. “We’ve just endured one of the worst things that people endure. You’re going to listen to us, and we’re going to start making change.”


See also:

A version of this news article first appeared in the Rules for Engagement blog.