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Philadelphia Student Union


The Philadelphia Student Union (PSU) is a community organizing and leadership development non-profit organization in Philadelphia. Its stated mission is to build the power of young people to demand a high quality education in the Philadelphia public school system. The organization claims to address problems of school funding, teacher quality, school climate, and other barriers to education for Philadelphia students, with students themselves as active leaders.

The Philadelphia Student Union was founded in 1995. The organization has helped to launch high school students' unions in six other cities, including the Chicago Students Union, Newark Students Union, and Providence Student Union. The organization has been recognized with various awards and honors including a number of Philadelphia Public School Notebook Student Journalism Awards, a Philadelphia Human Values Award, and the Philadelphia Education Fund's EDDY Award. The organization has also been the subject of extensive academic research.

Earliest media coverage of the Philadelphia Student Union appears to date from 1996. The Philadelphia Student Union achieved prominence in 2001 when the members of the organization organized civil disobedience that "blocked access to the school district headquarters on a day when the administration was negotiating with EdisonLearning... which had signed a $2.7 million contract with the state and was set to take over the running of a considerable proportion of the district’s schools." This occurred during a controversy over whether EdisonLearning should be given control of the Philadelphia School District.

In 2002, the Philadelphia Student Union received some media attention for their successful campaign to get the School District of Philadelphia to create Student Success Centers. PSU based this campaign on a survey of students throughout Philadelphia that "found 68% of them do not receive help with personal problems from anyone at school." Student Success Centers were implemented in 10 schools in 2003 and 2004.

The organization received media coverage in 2003 for a "nearly weeklong, 110-mile march" that a number of high school students completed from Philadelphia to Pennsylvania Capitol in Harrisburg, for "increased state funding to public schools".

In 2010, the Philadelphia Student Union's Campaign for Nonviolent Schools received media attention for "a 650-person youth-led march down Broad Street" in Philadelphia. In August 2012, the School Reform Commission announced that the Campaign had been successful in implementing changes in the Student Code of Conduct (the discipline code for the District) that limited which offenses could be met with suspension or expulsion. The Philadelphia Student Union was also cited as instrumental in the efforts to secure a new building for West Philadelphia High School.


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