More

Occupy Colleges: Student Supporters Of Occupy Wall Street Continue To Show Solidarity

Occupy Colleges Occupy Wall Street Students Colleg

First Posted: 10/13/11 11:24 AM ET Updated: 10/13/11 11:26 AM ET

NEW YORK -- Thursday afternoon, in concert with the Occupy Wall Street movement, students from nearly 150 college campuses across the country will participate in their second protest in as many weeks.

As with the nationwide walkout held last Wednesday, the students will band together to make their voices heard -- with many expressing frustration over increasing amounts of student loan debt and the rising cost of tuition, in addition to a paucity of jobs for recent graduates.

“We’re planning to do these walkouts and shows of solidarity every two weeks until these issues are resolved,” said Natalia Abrams, 31, who helps to organize Occupy Colleges, a student-led grassroots group based in Los Angeles that helped facilitate both nationwide protests. “If Occupy Wall Street is indefinite, we’re indefinite as well. We plan to keep the solidarity protest going for as long as it takes.”

In many ways, today's protest marks a significant challenge for student backers of the Occupy Wall Street movement, not only in terms of coordination and organization, but also with respect to maintaining momentum.

“Participating in something that’s clearly ascendant is always something of a rush,” said Doug McAdam, a professor of sociology at Stanford University. While McAdam said it was inherently difficult to build on the momentum of a movement that's neither centralized nor coordinated, he cautioned against making too much of its diffuse nature.

“We like to talk about big, historic movements as if they were these spectacularly well-coordinated affairs. They almost never are,” said McAdam, who teaches a course on political movements. “Very broad, diverse efforts are generally more effective because you can speak to different constituencies. It becomes quite difficult to suppress a movement that doesn’t have one distinct leader or head.”

Occupy Colleges, which started as a Facebook page and Twitter handle less than two weeks ago, has quickly blossomed into a burgeoning movement bolstered by a groundswell of student-led support. As of Thursday morning, student organizers at 136 college campuses -- from Sarah Lawrence College to Boise State University to San Diego City College -- have pledged to participate in Thursday’s show of solidarity.

“Around the country, more and more high school students are foregoing a college education because their families can no longer afford it. So many more are graduating with inconceivable amounts of debt and stepping into the worse job market in decades,” reads a statement on Occupy Colleges’ website. “They take unpaid internships that go nowhere and soon can’t pay college loans. We represent students who share these fears and support Occupy Wall Street.”

Shay Berman, a 20-year-old junior at Michigan State University, is organizing his campus’s show of support later today. Based on rough Twitter estimates, Berman is hopeful that about 50 of his classmates will join him at the Rock, which is a common area on the East Lansing campus dedicated to free speech and protest.

“We’re worried about our future and that the middle class won’t exist once we get out of school. Also, the rising cost of tuition is a big concern,” said Berman, who said his participation in the Occupy Wall Street protests marked his first significant political involvement. “We’re just frustrated with America and the whole way our society is run. “

According to Gonzalo Vizcardo, 21, a senior economics major at Florida Atlantic University in Boca Raton, Fla., 45 students plan to attend a general assembly on campus later this afternoon. Meanwhile, about 40 students at Texas State University in San Marcos, Texas, are readying for a similar gathering.

Last night in San Marcos, a handful of students spent the evening making hand-painted signs in preparation. Later today, the same group plans to meet at the Stallion, a "free speech zone" at the center of campus. From there, the group will march to the nearby square in downtown San Marcos. Their aim: increased visibility and the dispelling of apathy.

“Student debt is a huge issue, with some students starting to question the wisdom of even having a degree anymore,” said Joshua Christopher Harvey, a 24-year-old junior who previously served in the U.S. Air Force prior to being discharged under Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell. Harvey organized both last week’s walkout and today’s march. “The main thing that’s come up at our meetings is that there’s only a six-month grace period to start paying our loans back -- and we’re worried there won’t even be jobs available once we get out.”

Brayden King, an assistant professor of management at the Kellogg School of Management at Northwestern University, sees college students as a natural constituency in the Occupy Wall Street movement.

“If, say, you’re a middle-aged investment banker, you might look around your social group and think the economy isn’t doing all that bad,” said King. “But if you’re a college student or a recent graduate, you’re thinking the exact opposite when all of your friends are either unemployed or working in jobs that are much lower paying than what they expected to be doing after they graduated.”

Michael T. Heaney, an assistant professor of organizational studies and political science at the University of Michigan, also sees the college protests as a natural part of the movement’s evolution.

“For young people in particular, it’s an opportunity for them to learn about activism and politics for the first time,” said Heaney. “While the 2000s were an intense period of protest, the current generation in college wasn’t really exposed to the earlier period of activism of the last decade. And for a lot of these students, this is their first movement.”

Heaney is currently studying how the first time an individual participates in an activist movement later reverberates throughout the course of their lives. “The point is that first experience with activism will have a long-lasting effect, affecting the way they think about activism, the tactics they think are important and even affecting their social networks,” said Heaney. “But it also has the opportunity to put them off.”

In terms of Occupy Wall Street's ultimate impact, McAdam notes that while early participation in a movement can help shape young activists, equally important is the historical context of the movement itself.

McAdam studied participants in Freedom Summer -- the 10 week-period in 1964 when civil rights activists, many of them college students, traveled to Mississippi to register black voters -- who later became more politically engaged members of society as a result.

He found that it wasn’t simply their activism that mattered, but the fact that they participated in the movement during the beginning of sixties-era radicalism.

“In many ways, this particular moment looks a lot like a Freedom Summer moment," said McAdam. "With our economic woes likely to continue, or perhaps even deepen, for some time and the election coming up next year, it is very likely that we are entering a period of escalating economic, political and social turmoil.

“For students, it won’t have a long-term impact simply because they went to an Occupy Wall Street demonstration a few times, but because it began a process that carried them in the way that Freedom Summer started a process for the Mississippi volunteers.”

FOLLOW HUFFPOST COLLEGE

NEW YORK -- Thursday afternoon, in concert with the Occupy Wall Street movement, students from nearly 150 college campuses across the country will participate in their second protest in as many weeks.
NEW YORK -- Thursday afternoon, in concert with the Occupy Wall Street movement, students from nearly 150 college campuses across the country will participate in their second protest in as many weeks.
 
 
  • Comments
  • 231
  • Pending Comments
  • 0
  • View FAQ
Comments are closed for this entry
View All
Favorites
Recency  | 
Popularity
Page: 1 2 3 4  Next ›  Last »  (4 total)
11:37 AM on 12/01/2011
"Man was born free, and he is everywhere in chains." (Rousseau)

Do a background check on fbi/police assassins and serial killers (via my sites); then be less concerned about the run of the mill murderer.

http://current.com/community/92710699_fear-less-the-murderer.htm

College campuses across the nation are in fascist/police lockdown under the influence of fbi assassins, as evidenced by gross violations of human, civil, and constitutional rights of our citizens.See my documentations:

The fbi, military intelligence at CSUN (James Wolf), police, UT chancellor, UT legal counsel all team up to create a fraudulent police report with patently false contents in order to find a way to illegally arrest this fbi whistleblower. See this and related links:

http://www.sosbeevfbi.com/part19a-updatefo.html


http://sosbeevfbi.ning.com/forum/topics/americans-embrace-their

http://www.sosbeevfbi.com/oliverwendallhol.html


http://barbarahartwellvscia.blogspot.com/2011/03/this-congress-of-usa-will-live-in.html
http://sosbeevfbi.ning.com/forum/topics/war-on-terror-2010

http://barbarahartwellvscia.blogspot.com/2011/10/courts-and-fbi-torture-maim-or-kill_01.html

http://www.sosbeevfbi.com/hooverletter.html

Also see:

http://www.stanforddaily.com/2011/11/15/campus-rotc-unlikely/

Re: Insider Trades:

http://ttu.academia.edu/geralsosbee

http://www.sosbeevfbi.com/part4-worldinabo.html

Human Experimentation:

http://www.sosbeevfbi.com/non-consensual.html
05:28 AM on 10/16/2011
I think modern people have the idea that the economy can be shaped and steered by government, corporate and financial influenjces... and therefore they are expecting an improvement versus the random machinations of Adam Smith's "invisible hand".
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Moravecglobal
08:18 PM on 10/15/2011
Every qualified California student should get a place in University of California system. That's a desirable goal for a public university. However, UC Berkeley Chancellor Robert Birgeneau displaces Californians qualified for education at Cal. with $50,600 tuition Foreigners.
UC tuition increases exceed the national average rate of increase. The University of California Board Of Regents jeopardizes Californians attending higher education by making UC the most expensive public university in the United States.
Self-serving tuition increases are used by UC President Mark Yudof to increase the pay of 80,000 eligible faculty and others. Payoffs like these point to higher operating costs and still higher tuition for Californians.
I agree that faculty in higher education and senior management, like Yudof and Birgeneau, should consider the students' welfare and put it high on their values.
Deeds unfortunately do not bear out the students' welfare values of senior management and the UC Board of Regents.
Opinions to UC Board of Regents, email marsha.kelman@ucop.edu
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Vic22
"I write to make it right, don't like what I see"
12:48 PM on 10/14/2011
I know most of those IVY league kids are hoping to Occupy wall street... in the corner offices
12:11 PM on 10/14/2011
The whole problem with this whole student loan issue is our government has been pushing around this idea that every kid deserves a college education. Honestly, think back to your high school days. How many of those kids really had the mindset or the aptitidute to be in college? Not many. Plus, most families honestly can't affort it. But it's been drilled in everyone's head that college is the way to go. You can see that by looking at how our high schools have changed over the past decade or so. The school district I graduated from had a vocational high school for kids who wanted to learn about a trade (construction, auto mechanics, ect) but that school has been shut down because the focus has shifted to pushing kids to college.
And then we have all these kids who were told that all an employer cares about is that you have a college degree, it doesn't matter what it's in . I remember my teacher's telling me that in high school, you can have a degree in underwater basket weaving and employers don't care because all the degree tells them is you can learn. That sadly is not the case. Employers today want graduates to have learned skills or information that can be applied to the job they are trying to work in, and unfortunately there aren't many jobs which require degrees in political science or african american studes or art history.
photo
BigBrickHouse
I'm no longer PC; Quit that nasty habit years ago.
02:50 AM on 10/15/2011
Fanned & faved~ I completely agree with you. My husband learned a trade in the 80's when he was in HS and has since earned upwards of $100,000 a yr without a college degree or the burden of student loans.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
cornel
wuf wuf
10:19 AM on 10/14/2011
Now you show that you have learned your civic lessons ! Students, continue to support the 99%, your future depends on it !
11:12 AM on 10/14/2011
Thank you, will do !
photo
JubalTHarshaw
Just Passing Through...
09:12 AM on 10/14/2011
Well as much fun as this has been some of us have to get to work to support the infrastructure and social safety nets that allow such protests to flourish. As in times past, weather will be the great determining factor on the sustainability of a protest movement. Students will have to choose between a protest and the grades they need to stay enrolled. Parents will start to question how long they are willing to subsidize the movement as they look at their own financial situation. The ability to express diverse and often angry opinions without fear of reprisal is the greatest freedom that we enjoy as a nation. Play nice all.
09:02 AM on 10/14/2011
Way to Go Students! Your parents reacted the same way in the 70's and got us out of Vietnam. This country's politicians continually under estimate the strength of your generation. Make a double impact-- while you are protesting make sure that everyone protesting is registered to vote and then vote during election time. Your vote counts. If we are truly the 99%, we should be able to vote those out of office who are catering to the 1%.

Long Live Occupy Wall Street
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
09:28 AM on 10/14/2011
Proud to be first fan.
10:16 AM on 10/14/2011
Well said. in the 70's I protested, Now its their turn. They should never give in . And hopefully they get out there and vote for their best interests. which is never what the politicians want
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Gurinder Dhillon
Republicans thrive on false equivalencies.
08:46 AM on 10/14/2011
I bet the student walkout would've been a lot larger had they decided to hold it on a Friday afternoon.
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
photo
10:17 AM on 10/14/2011
or served beer
photo
graffitijoe
snowballs chance n SoCal
07:35 AM on 10/14/2011
Hey kids - if you don't want to pay back your student toan - don't sign a paper saying that you will.
07:01 AM on 10/14/2011
I feel sorry for these students who aren't in the real world yet! Wait- you will see the light at the end of the tunnel- I would never want to be your age again- and lived through what I already have lived thru!
06:54 AM on 10/14/2011
In other Countries- Education is paid for- knowing the people will give back to the Country! What happened here what country U.S. made more money on it's people than any other Country & the people had to pay for it! American people have suffered way to much & are owed plenty. We can't even get a Jobs bill passed which is 1% of that owed to the American people. American people are owed Jobs-Money-Health Benefits among other things- No nation has profited more than this nation!
photo
JubalTHarshaw
Just Passing Through...
06:58 AM on 10/14/2011
Yeah. Let’s take a close look at England, Greece and Spain and see how well your thesis holds up in the real world...
07:57 AM on 10/14/2011
They have made so much money they abused it- like our Country as well!
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
photo
10:23 AM on 10/14/2011
france germany mexico uk australia all charge tuition
photo
JubalTHarshaw
Just Passing Through...
06:53 AM on 10/14/2011
“Around the country, more and more high school students are foregoing a college education because their families can no longer afford it. So many more are graduating with inconceivable amounts of debt and stepping into the worse job market in decades,” There's nothing quite like stepping out into the real world to make you reassess some of the political opinions that seemed so warm and fuzzy when you were living by semesters. Is the college graduate who runs up a six figure debt while acquiring an undergraduate degree that qualifies him to perform the same job he had in high school a victim or a fool?
06:43 AM on 10/14/2011
All these Colleges & Universitys among other Corporations are holding all these millions & Billions of dollars in Endowments & you have all these students suffering- Instead of paying Snookie all this money to do speeches- give it back to the people!
photo
JubalTHarshaw
Just Passing Through...
06:56 AM on 10/14/2011
You don't quite grasp the cost of maintaining a multi-million dollar physical plant like a university do you? Do you believe that you have a "right" to demand that funds donated to universities be used to give you something others have to pay for? Do you understand that many endowments are given with use restrictions?
08:09 AM on 10/14/2011
You don't grasp Reality- A) You didn't work for that money that money was handed to you & in times of Crises the money should be diverted in other ways- Paying Snookie $32k for a 20 minitue speech- would have put that person in their grave- to give it to a person seeking a education they would have been very happy with the & to answer your question do I have the Right- I certainly do! If I was a student today I would DEMAND it!
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
judge jake
04:53 AM on 10/14/2011
so 50 people a shot at 135 places....boy how to keep up with the swelling numbers