Defining Diversity: Student Writing on the Violence Against Women Act
Featuring an excerpt from Lowell, MA students’ recently published book on diversity and equity
By Carla M. Duran Capellan, former Generation Citizen student and Student Leadership Board member
I was asked by Jessica Lander, my history teacher, to write a chapter for a book with twenty-three other students from the first integrated high school in the United States — Lowell High School in Massachusetts. The book set out to understand the meaning of diversity and equity in America today.
The book is a concise and inspiring journey through a century-and-a-half of seminal moments in American history told through the voices of the next generation. It explores the key ideas, federal laws, and Supreme Court decisions that have shaped our society.
As a twelfth-grade student, I chose to write about the Violence Against Women Act, because I think our society needs to know how women are protected by the law and how they should be treated. I hope that people who read this chapter will learn that women are important, powerful, and valuable.
Now, I’m a freshman at Middlesex Community College and I’m proud to see that the work and effort put into this book show our government and education system how important it is for my generation to learn about civics. I think it is important to teach young people how to participate in their communities because we are the voices of the future and the ones that are going to get done, what needs to be done. We are the ones that are going out there and be part of the generation that says, “We are going to make things different.”
I hope that everyone enjoys this book as much as we did while writing it and I hope that those parents, teachers, and the public, in general, see that civics education is the best thing that the young adults and teenagers can have in the schools and in society today.