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High School Students Around the Country Are Staging Walkouts to Protest Trump

Hundreds of students from high schools in Arizona, Northern California, Iowa, Washington, and New York have been protesting the results of the 2016 election.

Berkeley High School Walkout — B (@BerenabasG)November 9, 2016

As the reality of Donald Trump's unprecedented election upset continues to settle in, high school students across the country have been getting up from their desks and walking out of class to protest the new president-elect.

Students in Arizona kicked off the movement by staging a walkout on Tuesday before the election results came in, protesting Donald Trump and Sheriff Joe Arpaio, who ended up losing his reelection bid in the state. About a dozen Muslim students from North High School reportedly joined up with a group of roughly 200 students from Maryvale High School to rally near polling sites with a giant blowup figure of the notorious law man waring a prison jumpsuit, according to the Arizona Republic.

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More HS youth walkout in Phoenix urging voters to defeat Sheriff Arpaio, students will be canvassing now! — Maria Elena Durazo (@MariaEDurazo)November 8, 2016

Then, early on Wednesday, students at four different high schools in Berkeley and San Jose, California, left their classrooms and staged peaceful walkouts on campus, SF Gate reports. At least 1,500 students at Berkeley High School—one known for its protests—marched across campus, chanting "not my president" and "love trumps hate."

BERKELEY HIGH SCHOOL CHANTS

SI SE PUEDE!!!!— B (@BerenabasG)November 9, 2016

Hundreds of students across several Des Moines Public Schools in Iowa also stepped out of classes to protest Trump, and smaller groups of students in Seattle, Washington, and New York City also reportedly walked out of class today.

High schoolers protesting down 2nd Ave in nyc. ✊✊✊✊✊ — ✦broken✦ (@mimserino)November 9, 2016

"This is a really intense learning experience for the students," Berkeley High's principal, Sam Pasarow, told SF Gate. "I don't have the ability to say stop, and I'm not sure that I would."

Watch: Trump's Guide to Dealing With Protesters