Philadelphia

Students in Philadelphia Area Walk Out of Schools as Part of National Protest of Gun Violence

From Pennsylvania to New Jersey to Delaware students are walking out of class to protest gun violence.

Our team coverage of the nationwide school walkouts to honor the victims of the Florida school shooting and call for gun reform focus on the action taken by Germantown Friends School students Wednesday morning.

Student activism is on full display Wednesday as students in the Philadelphia region and beyond walked out of their classrooms to mark the one-month anniversary of the Parkland, Florida high school shooting.

Students — many not old enough to vote — at private and public, small and large area schools left classes around 10 a.m. to protest gun violence in what was expected to be the biggest national demonstration yet that has emerged following the massacre of 17 people at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School.

Students at Philadelphia’s iconic Central High School left class and gathered on the lawn for 17 minutes of solidarity, one minute for each victim of the Florida school shooting.

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Students around Pennsylvania, New Jersey and Delaware took park in Wednesday's National Student Walkout. Here, students at Concord High School in Delaware remember the victims of the Parkland, Florida school shooting.
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Students form a heart at St Mark's High School in Wilmington.
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Unprovoked students at Parkland High School in the Lehigh Valley used their cellphone lights as the 17 victims names from the Parkland, Florida shooting were being read out loud. Their demonstration took place in the school.
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Students marched outside Lower Merion High School in Montgomery County.
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At Penncrest High School in Media, Delaware County, students gathered at the football stadium.
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College students also took part. At Gwynedd Mercy University in Montgomery County, more than 100 students, faculty and staff gathered around the campus bell tower for 17 minutes of silence as the bells rang 17 times in honor of the Parkland victims.
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Gwynedd Mercy University walkout.
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Hundreds of students stood in silence for 17 minutes outside Germantown Friends School in Philadelphia.
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Students gathered outside Central High School in Philadelphia.
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Central High School students held signs calling for gun safety.
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A Philadelphia student holds up a sign.
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Students at Philadelphia High School of Creative And Performing Arts participate in a walkout.
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A CAPA student holds a sign calling for no guns in school.
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Students then gathered for a rally against gun violence outside Philadelphia City Hall.
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Students walked out at Cherry Hill West before the 10 a.m. time picked by national organizers.

Outside Central High, juniors Makyiah Adams and Cassidy Arrington delivered a powerful spoken word poem:

"If you're still defending the NRA, then you just haven't thought about it enough. And, if you're still torn between the right to carry and the right to breath, then you just haven't thought about it enough. Maybe this is why they call teenagers irrational, it must seem naively absurd to actually thinking through a problem. And maybe this is why they call teenagers entitled when my right to live is more important than your right to carry. So get off your hands because every student here would be glad to see you on your feet."

Following the walkout at Central and other schools, students planned to join parents, elected officials, educators and community members in a march organized by the Philadelphia Student Union group to the Philadelphia School District headquarters along Broad Street. They then marched to City Hall for a 12:30 p.m. rally.

The Philadelphia School District said it won’t discipline students who walked out as long as they returned to the building to resume normal school activities once the walkout is over.

Students at Jack M. Barrack Hebrew Academy on the Main Line walked out of classes Wednesday, joining thousands of others around the country in sending a message to lawmakers about gun control in the U.S.

Students at Cherry Hill West walked out ahead of 10 a.m., carrying signs as they marched around the campus.

At other schools, events acknowledging the movement were held inside school. At Pennsauken High School in New Jersey, about 1,300 students signed up for a “walkout” of class but not the school building as 17 bells tolled for the 17 victims.

Not all schools are on board with students plans to protest. At Sayreville War Memorial in New Jersey, the administration said that any students who left school will be given a two-day suspension.

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