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SPIGOLON: What has 26th Amendment wrought in 50 years? - The Covington News
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26th amendment, granting 18-year-olds the right to vote, marks its 50th anniversary
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ESU Insider ESU Students Don t Just Study Government, They Run It
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The 2020 Election Was a Breakthrough Moment For Young Voters Time 2 days ago Charlotte Alter © Jamie Germano USA Today/Reuters In an Election Day tradition, a visitor places their I Voted sticker on the gravestone of Susan B. Anthony in Rochester, NY on Nov. 3, 2020.
You probably don’t think of 2020 as a generational change election. It resulted in the presidency of Joe Biden, the oldest man ever to take the oath of office. The dramatic week of vote counting, and the subsequent attempts by a sitting President of the United States to subvert the outcome, mean that the election of 2020 will be remembered more as a test for American democracy than one that marked the rising power of a new wave of voters.
Children are exposed to images of violence almost every day, whether through the media or in real life. Consumption of violent imagery can take a harmful toll on a child’s mental and emotional well-being, research shows. Parents, especially those with young children, may be asking themselves how to talk about violence with their kids.
Here are four articles from The Conversation U.S. that offer insight into how to have hard conversations with children about violence.
1. Teach children to be resilient
Vanessa LoBlue, an assistant professor of psychology at Rutgers University-Newark, writes about ways parents can foster a supportive environment to help children develop resilience in stressful situations.