Leona works with students to make sense of the very serious issues that they face. After the school shooting in Parkland, Florida, a number of her students learned about other schools organizing walkouts to protest gun violence. Her job as school counselor was to help them set goals and to understand what their message was.
She challenged the organizers by asking, "What’s the point of this and what’s your mission? What do you want to accomplish with this?” Leona was there to make sure that students’ voices were heard. She knew that for the walkout to be successful, her students had to understand what they were protesting.
Students took two-and-a-half weeks to plan the walkout. They invited prominent community members, they researched victims' personalities to honor them, and they voted on which students would speak during the walkout.
“I gave them the space and the tools to access their voices. I want to empower students to think really powerfully and be active members of their community,” reflects Leona, who values that her career allows her to teach students how to make change in the world and become agents of change. “Through planning the walkout, they learned what it means to protest, how to be an ally, and what it means to be an advocate.”