In between bites of a breakfast bar, Rep. Erin Murphy, DFL-St. Paul, chatted with a group of Burnsville High School seniors about a House bill she introduced last month to fund universal preschool for 4-year-olds in Minnesota.
Murphy authored the bill because as a mom and a nurse, she's concerned about the achievement gap and thinks funding preschool for all is a way to "get students to reach their full potential," she said.
Having studied the idea of universal preschool, the dozen teens gathered in her office had plenty of questions: How would the program be funded? Could requiring more kids to attend preschool actually diminish their creativity?
"Do you think we should do it?" Murphy asked. "Who disagrees? And it's OK, this is a place we can disagree."
Murphy said that while she often meets with students, she hadn't experienced this scenario before, with students examining a bill and then visiting to ask her more about it.
For 320 students in American government and public affairs classes at Burnsville High School, the annual Capitol visit is one part of an assignment to thoroughly research a current bill and develop an opinion on whether it should become law. The assignment and visit have been going on for 20 years now, said Colleen Coleman, a government teacher.
But the larger goal is making civics and the political process come to life, she said.
"I think … how a bill becomes a law is kind of what they're trying to learn, but then what's great about this project is they learn about so many other things," Coleman said.