Andrew Yang wins Harmony School mock election
The Harmony mock election was complete with student candidates, campaign managers, poll workers and a debate moderator. It all came to an end as the whole school gathered to hear the result. The room went silent before being filled with the sound of clapping and cheering as a fourth grader announced into a microphone that President
Davidson as Trump explained how he would pay for the wall and Thompson as Yang described how he would pay for universal basic income.
"How we're going to pay for UBI is by taxing big companies like Amazon and Apple," Thompson said. "Amazon has over
He said this money would go to the people. He said UBI would create more jobs, support mental health, cause crime to go down and enhance the economy.
"We're going to take money from Pentagon, where it's buying things that are not necessary, not protecting the people and not helping with the big problem with illegal immigration," Davidson said. "These are small numbers whenever you're at the Pentagon, OK, believe me."
The students portraying the candidates answered questions from moderator
For Thompson, the preparation involved taking lots of notes while doing research, which included talking to those who support Yang.
"It taught me a lot about politics," Thompson said. "I didn't really know anything about politics until I took this class."
He studied more than policies, though he still felt nervous, he said. He looked at Yang's body language, mannerisms, the way he spoke and even how he dressed, he said.
For Davidson, practicing stump speeches in class and receiving feedback was helpful. Davidson said it was easy to find footage of Trump and to find out what his views are beliefs are, which he described as extreme.
"I've learned to look at things from another side, even if I disagree with it," Davidson said. "I think that it's all been really fun and I like these kinds of things that Harmony does. I think that Harmony is really great for that kind of thing. I understand how to educate myself, I think about what to look into. But I think as you learn more about anything, you realize how little you know."
Though Davidson speaking as Trump received boos from the crowd, Shipley said she thought he did a better job than people gave him credit for.
"They know we want them to become them," Murphey said. "Taking on the persona becomes particularly critical during the debate, because then they're answering questions off the cuff, so they have to kind of be in the mind of the candidate enough to where they can do that."
Watching the actual presidential debates is required for her students, she said, and they discuss them in class.
"It's just a way of getting the kids to engage that they will find interesting," Murphey said. "I'm a great believer in learning by osmosis, that they don't feel that they're being forced to learn something, that they'll do it because they want to."
In the morning, students portraying candidates, 11
Each of the students running in the race took the stage, many in suits or blazers, in front of a projected photo of their candidate. As each candidate stood at a podium painted red, white and blue to look like the American flag, some students in the audience sat cross legged with clipboards in their laps, taking notes. They clapped after each candidate, some of whom waved to the crowd as they exited.
While Thompson and Davidson were the ones who ultimately took the stage in the afternoon, everyone in
"It's interesting," Halloway Galvan, a fourth grader, said. "You get to find out more about people and know more about them, you can ask them questions. It's fun."
The third and fourth graders handed out ballots and passed out "I Voted" stickers as people filed in to vote. Decorated poster boards provided privacy for voters.
"What I really hope that they learn is to become engaged citizens," Murphey said. "I mean, that's what it's all about in the end, is that they don't only just vote if they can this time, but that they continue to see that as a really important responsibility from now on, and I think that they will."
As the school narrowed the pool down to one candidate from each party, candidates such as
When Thompson, or Yang, won, he thanked Davidson, Shipley and all the other candidates for their work.
He received an award in memory of
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