MURFREESBORO — Celebrating the 227th anniversary of the U.S. Constitution took a
new learning turn Sept. 17 at MTSU as special guests helped students, faculty
and staff read the historic document.
Sixth-graders
from Murfreesboro’s Mitchell-Neilson Elementary School joined Tennessee Secretary of State Tre
Hargett, MTSU coaches and student-athletes, and volunteers from the College of
Behavioral and Health Sciences to read the Constitution’s seven articles and 27 amendments, including the Bill of Rights, outside MTSU’s Cason-Kennedy
Nursing Building for almost 90 minutes.
“You
all were absolutely the best readers here,” Dr. Terry Whiteside, dean of the
College of Behavioral Sciences, told the nearly 50 youngsters from Jennie
Lovvorn’s and Gayle Porterfield’s sixth-grade classrooms.
“We’re
counting on you to carry this knowledge on. I’m really so proud of you all.”
The
children grinned their thanks and looked forward excitedly to an unexpected
ice-cream treat before their brief field trip ended.
“They
practiced hard this morning and on the bus over here, too,” Lovvorn explained
as her young charges sat on the grass, listened to their friends read, and
watched college students scurry past en route to classes. Their principal,
Robin Newell, looked on approvingly.
“We
were honored to help. It’s another great opportunity for us,” Newell said,
explaining that the special field trip allowed students to expand the
Murfreesboro City Schools system’s partnership with the College of Behavioral and Health
Sciences.
The alliance
includes a new Collaborative Learning and Leadership Institute at Mitchell-Neilson, which launched this school year to address
educational and environmental issues that affect student and family success and
help students develop lifelong learning and leadership skills. MTSU students
are serving as mentors to the children and working alongside classroom
teachers, in part thanks to an $8,000 grant from the Dollar General Literacy
Foundation earlier this year.
During
their campus visit, some of the Mitchell-Neilson students said their family
members attend MTSU. Others said they’ve already decided that MTSU is the
school for them — in a few more years.
Lovvorn
said the students learned about American history last year and are studying
world history in the sixth grade. She added that Mitchell-Neilson was “glad to
use this to incorporate another great lesson about leadership.”
All
around campus, at similar intervals throughout the day and early Thursday,
Sept. 18, volunteers from MTSU’s colleges stood outside their buildings and read
passages from the Constitution. Some held forth to relatively large crowds,
while others spoke quietly to a handful of people.
“We ask
our professors to facilitate their students’ involvement in Constitution Day by
taking them to the reading in their college, or in another college, so they can
engage as citizen scholars,” said Dr. Mary Evins, an associate research
professor at MTSU’s Center for Historic Preservation and coordinator for the
MTSU chapter of the American Democracy Project.
“In the
MTSU tradition that is recognized statewide for its excellence in civic
leadership, we as a university pause to participate in this national day of
civic learning and share it across the disciplines.”
MTSU
observes the Constitution’s 1787 signing every year with special events and
programs organized by the American Democracy Project.
This
year’s special civic-awareness efforts also included a voter registration
drive, assisted by the League of Women Voters, Tennessee Citizen Action, the
American Association of University Women, the MTSU Democrats and the College
Republicans, as well as Hargett and his staff. The nonprofit organizations also
plan to return to campus Sept. 24 from 9 a.m. to 2 p.m. for National Voter
Registration Day.
The next
state and federal general election in Tennessee is Tuesday, Nov. 4, and early
voting begins in Tennessee Oct. 15. According to Tennessee law, voters:
· Must be a citizen of the United
States who will be 18 years old or older before the date of the next election.
· Must be a resident of Tennessee.
· Cannot have been convicted of a
felony, or if you have, your voting rights have been restored by a court order
or pardon.
· Must be properly registered no
later than 30 days before the election.
For more
information about American Democracy Project events at MTSU, email amerdem@mtsu.edu.
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