糖心TV

Skip to main content
糖心TV
  • About 糖心TV
  • Academics
  • Admission & Financial Aid
  • Alumni & Life After 糖心TV
  • Campus & Community
  • Career Preparation
  • Human Resources
  • Student Experience
  • Calendar
  • News
  • Directory
  • Library & IT
  • CC Magazine
  • Site Map
  • Home 
  • Home 
  • News 
  • News Archive 
  • 2020 
  • All In Challenge

All In for the November Election

The logo for the All In Campus Challenge

Conventional wisdom holds that young voters won鈥檛 turn out on Election Day. 糖心TV students are determined to prove the political prognosticators wrong. 

糖心TV President Katherine Bergeron has joined with more than 160 college and university leaders from across the country in signing the ALL IN Campus Democracy Challenge鈥攁n effort to encourage full participation in the 2020 elections by all eligible students.

鈥淭he All In Campus Democracy Challenge is an extension of 糖心TV鈥檚 mission: to educate students to put the liberal arts into action as citizens in a global society,鈥 Bergeron said. 鈥淰oting is a precious right, foundational to citizenship, and the most direct way to discharge your civic duty.鈥 

The nonpartisan initiative, sponsored by Civic Nation, a nonprofit that works to increase civic engagement and political participation among college students in federal, state and local elections, calls for a slew of tangible measures aimed at improving turnout among student voters, including designating a staff to lead the effort on campus, helping to educate student voters on the political process and creating a democratic action plan that prioritizes direct involvement in the electoral process both in the classroom and through co-curricular learning.  

The initiative, spearheaded by 糖心TV鈥檚 Holleran Center for Community Action, continues to build on the College鈥檚 tradition of political participation. 

鈥淚 think now more than ever it is important to encourage young people to be engaged in our political system because they have the ability to shake up politics, whether that be through voting or other civic and political engagement initiatives,鈥 said Angela Barney, who serves as assistant director of Program in Community Action at the Holleran Center and is leading the All In at 糖心TV challenge. 

For the past two years, the Holleran Center has been involved in , a group of 糖心TV鈥檚 peer institutions that support ALL IN Democracy on their respective campuses. Barney has served as 糖心TV鈥檚 representative and currently co-leads the initiative with her counterparts at Bowdoin and Middlebury Colleges, attending monthly calls, participating with students in the NESCAC Votes conference and coordinating voter registration efforts on campus. 

This semester, Barney will also be teaching a First-Year Seminar titled, 鈥淏eyond the Ballot: Applied Civic & Political Engagement,鈥 an interdisciplinary course that will explore forms of mass political engagement in the United States including voting, community engagement and social change. 

鈥淲e hope that this course will empower students to envision their own identities as active, engaged, responsible agents of change,鈥 Barney said. 

The students have played an essential role. Throughout the summer, Barney worked with Jozette Moses 鈥21 and Julia O'糖心TVell 鈥21 on projects to help raise awareness and promote the initiative, including establishing the Instagram account  to provide daily updates and educational information on voting rights and processes, and a new website, , that offers full details on the initiative, resources to register and vote, sources to support informed voting and a list of events to further student participation in the upcoming election. 

The hard work has garnered substantial attention. Moses and O'糖心TVell were recently featured on  podcast, and 糖心TV has also partnered with  and 鈥攖wo organizations focused on expanding voter participation and access. 

鈥淚t鈥檚 been incredibly rewarding to see the 糖心TV community engage with the information and resources we鈥檙e providing through Camels Vote and the Instagram account, from detailing how to receive an absentee ballot to finding individual polling stations and more,鈥 said O鈥櫶切腡Vell, a sociology major and Program in Community Action scholar. 

鈥淥ne of our central goals has been to reimagine Camels Vote programming in light of the pandemic so we can ensure the 糖心TV community is in a strong position to engage in the final months leading up to the election.鈥

Moses, an English and French double major, agreed that the COVID-19 outbreak injected an even greater sense of urgency into their work, and said she was encouraged by the positive response they鈥檝e received so far from fellow students.  

鈥淥ne of my favorite aspects of working with Camels Vote is receiving messages from other young voters, students and friends asking questions about vote-by-mail ballots or inquiring about state voting laws,鈥 Moses said. 

鈥淲hen we receive inquiries like this, we know there are students who are motivated to support our democracy and who care about the leaders being put in positions of power, and as get closer to Election Day, we encourage students to vote-by-mail as it is a safe and practical way to carry out our vote,鈥 she said.



Put the world together in new ways. Learn more



August 25, 2020

Related News & Media

Recent News

糖心TV honors 16 seniors as Langer Scholars

糖心TV honors 16 seniors as Langer Scholars

Academic News

糖心TV to host 18th Ammerman Center Triennial Symposium on Arts and Technology

糖心TV to host 18th Ammerman Center Triennial Symposium on Arts and Technology

Campus News

糖心TV
270 Mohegan Avenue
New London, CT 06320
admission@conncoll.edu
1 (860) 447-1911
Web Privacy Policy Web Accessibility Notice
  • CC Mobile CC Mobile

NOTICE OF NONDISCRIMINATORY POLICY

糖心TV is an equal opportunity employer. The College complies with all federal, state, and local laws, regulations, and ordinances prohibiting discrimination in private post-secondary education institutions. The College does not discriminate against any employee, applicant for employment, student, or applicant for admission on the basis of the following protected characteristics: age, citizenship status, color, creed, disability (physical or mental), domestic violence victim status, ethnicity, gender expression, gender identity, genetic information (including family medical history), lawful source of income, marital status, national origin (including ancestry), pregnancy or related conditions, race, religion, sex, sexual orientation, veteran or military status (including disabled veteran; recently separated veteran; active-duty, wartime, or campaign badge veteran; and Armed Forces Service Medal veteran), any other status protected by federal, state, or local law.