AUDIO: Voting Block (Commentary, KQED)
Youth Radio teen reporter Desmond Meagley doesn’t relate to Democrats or Republicans. Instead, he says young people like him use the Internet as a tool to influence social and political issues in a nonpartisan way. “My peers and I may tweet using #YesAllWomen, share news about the Middle East on Facebook, or post videos of police brutality to Vine,” he says, describing his online activism. Young people all over the world are using social media in this way to get their voices heard in discussions about issues that matter to them. While some call it a new age of political activism, others say that all that time on Twitter would be better spent creating change ‘IRL’.
Do Now
Do teens today identify with political parties, or are they redefining political action? What does being politically active mean to you? #DoNowPolitics
How to Do Now
To respond to the Do Now, you can comment below or post your response on social media platforms such as Twitter, Instagram, Tumblr, Vine, Flickr, Google +, etc. Just be sure to include @KQEDedspace and #DoNowPolitics in your posts. Go here for best practices for using Do Now, using Twitter for teaching, and using other digital tools.
Learn More About
When it comes to civic engagement, young people today are a bit of a puzzle. On the one hand millennials are less likely to identify with a particular political party than any previous generation. On the flip side, having grown up with digital media, many are expert at engaging friends, classmates and community members online in support of the political issues they care about.
When Youth Radio’s Desmond Meagley was a kid, he thought joining a political party was part of everyone’s duty as a member of society. But now that he’s 19 and about to be a first-time voter, he doesn’t think teens need political parties to make change. “My own political involvement mostly happens in front of a computer screen,” he says. “When an online movement like BlackLivesMatter can force police departments to review their tactics, it’s clear that joining a political party isn’t the only way to make change.”
Meagley isn’t the only one. According to a recent study about young people’s political activities, 41 percent of young people have engaged in at least one act of “participatory politics.” What does that mean exactly? In that same study, participatory politics are defined as “interactive, peer-based acts through which individuals and groups seek to exert both voice and influence on issues of public concern.” In other words: lots of teens are online, connecting to one another to make a difference about issues they feel passionate about.
So what happens when young people use social media to start political movements? While the effectiveness of some strategies, like changing your profile picture, remains debatable, other efforts have resulted in real-life results. For example, recently, football players at the University of Missouri announced via Twitter that they would refuse to play until the school’s president, Tim Wolfe, was removed from office. The players were joining forces with another student protester, who was on hunger strike, who objected to the way school administrators had handled a series of racist incidents on campus. Shortly after the announcement, both Wolfe and the University’s chancellor resigned their positions.
Social media can also fuel other youth-driven political strategies — like student groups pressuring college campuses to divest from industries that profit from social issues ranging from apartheid to fossil fuels. Divestment causes are on the rise at colleges across the country, and yield mixed results. But one thing they always do is raise awareness of the cause the students are rallying behind.
SIDEBAR: DISCUSSION
- What’s the relationship between online organizing (e.g., replacing your Facebook photo with an image that shows your support of an issue) and more traditional means of protest (e.g., mobilizing a walk-out)?
- How have your opinions on social and/or economic issues been affected by social media campaigns?
Can you think of other ways young people work towards social change today?Do Next
Do Next takes the online conversation to the next level: these are suggestions for ways to go out into your community and investigate how the topic featured in this Do Now plays out in people’s lives. Use digital storytelling tools and social media to share your story and take action. Make sure to tag your creations with #DoNowPolitics.
- The Power of Pictures: Create a picture that represents a cause that you care about, then post it to social media. Use hashtags and tag people who might find your post interesting to get your idea noticed.
- Political To-Do List: With a friend or a small group, make lists of the issues you individually think are especially important. Then, compare your lists, and discuss why you chose those issues and put them in that order. If you can, try to consolidate your lists into one you can agree on, and provide reasoning for each issue.
- Host a Twitter Debate: In the classroom, brainstorm some real-life issues that your class feels strongly about. Narrow it down to a few important ones, then choose sides and stage a mock debate. Create arguments, counter-arguments, rebuttals, and closing statements. To make it a contest, take a poll before and after each debate to see how many viewers changed their opinions. Assign a classmate to live-Tweet the debate and invite others to chime in. The team that sways the most people to their side wins!
- Interview the Other Side: Interview someone who has different values than you– social, political, economical, moral– and without being judgemental, ask them about how their background helped to shape their ideas. Be on the lookout for things you have in common that you didn’t expect. Use Youth Radio’s Interview Toolkit to help you write your questions.
More Resources
Online: How Black Lives Matter uses social media to fight the power (Wired) This multimedia build documents the growth and tactics used by the Black Lives Matter movement to mobilize advocates via social media. “If you’re a civil rights activist in 2015 and you need to get some news out, your first move is to choose a platform. If you want to post a video of a protest or a violent arrest, you put it up on Vine, Instagram, or Periscope. If you want to avoid trolls or snooping authorities and you need to coordinate some kind of action, you might chat privately with other activists on GroupMe. If you want to rapidly mobilize a bunch of people you know and you don’t want the whole world clued in, you use SMS or WhatsApp. If you want to mobilize a ton of people you might not know and you do want the whole world to talk about it: Twitter.”
Website: Millennials and Political News – Social Media – the Local TV for the Next Generation? (Journalism.org) This website breaks down the different ways various generations digest news content. “When it comes to where younger Americans get news about politics and government, social media look to be the local TV of the Millennial generation. About six-in-ten online Millennials (61%) report getting political news on Facebook in a given week, a much larger percentage than turn to any other news source, according to a new Pew Research Center analysis. This stands in stark contrast to internet-using Baby Boomers, for whom local TV tops the list of sources for political news at nearly the same reach (60%).”
Research: Youth and Participatory Politics:Lots of research and resources here for teachers looking to understand and build support for new ways to approach civic education in the digital age.