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Allen County Schools News Article

Burch Pens Top Essay in Statewide Contest

Ella Burch check


   Allen County-Scottsville High School junior Ella Burch was among four winners in the 30th annual Kentucky Secretary of State's Civic Essay Contest. Burch received a $1,000 cash scholarship from the office of Secretary of State Alison Lundergan Grimes as the junior class winner in the annual contest.

 

   Burch’s essay was her thoughts based on this year’s prompt.

 

   When an American citizen turns 18, he or she has the right to vote. Yet in recent years, America’s youngest voters are also America’s least frequent voters. Turnout among young voters has been consistently and significantly lower than for any other age group. Youth turnout (ages 18 to 30) was 28 percentage points lower than persons age 60 and older in 2016 and nearly 39 points lower in 2014. Is the current climate of divisive discourse part of the explanation for young voters’ disinterest? Or does the explanation lie elsewhere since vibrant and even contentious public discourse is expected in America given the First Amendment’s protection of free speech?

 

   “The First Amendment is arguably the most important of all of our amendments to the US constitution,” Burch wrote. “It is there to safeguard Americans from their federal government. You ask the question regarding the disinterest of young voters in reference to the protections provided by the First Amendment. To a young person such as myself, there is not a sense of any threat to free speech, or freedom of assembly, or freedom of religious practice. On the contrary, there is a sense of drowning in free speech. The issue is that young people believe that most of that speech is disingenuous distortion and/or outright lies.”

 

   Burch proceeds to give three reasons why young voters are disinterested.

 

   “The system is perceived as corrupt, there is no coherent and compelling message drawing us into the fray, and there is a degree of despair that anything can really change,” Burch wrote before launching into her arguments supporting her views.

 

   Burch began work on the five-paragraph essay last fall to submit by the December 21 deadline. Her entry along with entries from students across the Commonwealth was evaluated based on a rubric encompassing several factors. One-third of the judging criteria was based on the student’s research and understanding of the First Amendment. A second third was based on idea development and support. In addition, the remaining 33.3 percent of the essay was analyzed for organization, sentence structure, and grammar/correctness. The essay had to be 600-words or less and submitted in a typed and double-spaced format.

 

   The monetary awards were made possible by contributions from KEA and KEA Retired, the Scripps Howard Center for Civic Engagement at Northern Kentucky University, the University of Kentucky Scripps Howard First Amendment Center, the Kentucky Department of Education, Kids Voting Kentucky, and Harp Enterprises. The Scripps Howard Center for Civic Engagement at Northern Kentucky University and Kids Voting Kentucky judged the essay portion of the contest.

 

   Burch, the daughter of David and Kelly Burch, received the scholarship and recognition on Thursday during a special presentation at the Whitaker Bank/Kentucky High School Athletic Association Boys State Basketball Tournament in Lexington.

 

 

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