BUILD THE NEXT GENERATION OF KANSAS VOTERS
Voting is a habit. And the first vote matters most.
When students register to vote while in high school, they’re far more likely to stay engaged for life. Our new Kansas High School Voter Registration Report reveals exactly where young Kansans are—and aren’t—getting registered, with county-by-county data that shows the opportunity ahead.
In partnership with The Civics Center, The Voter Network hosted a virtual training on March 11, 2026 for student leaders ready to close that gap! If you missed it and would like to learn more, contact us at contact@thevoternetwork.org.

High School Voter Registration Drive Workshop
The Voter Network partnered with The Civics Center and hosted a High School Voter Registration Drive Workshop. If you missed the training, you can join an upcoming session held by The Civics Center (twice a week through April!).
Kansas Data: What We Found
Substantially more high school graduates were registered to vote in 2024 than in 2023. In 2026, let’s bring energy to our high school voters!
Here’s the truth: people listen to people they trust. Whether it’s a friend in the hallway or a teacher in the classroom, the messenger makes the difference.
You have the power to make an impact! Email us at contact@thevoternetwork.org to learn more.

Tools & Resources
About Us
About The Voter Network
The Voter Network is a nonpartisan civic engagement organization working to expand voter participation across Kansas through relational organizing—the simple but powerful idea that people are most influenced by those they know and trust. We partner with community organizations, educators, and volunteers to build sustainable systems for democratic participation across all election cycles, with particular emphasis on engaging populations historically underrepresented in the voting process.
About The Civics Center
The Civics Center is a national, nonpartisan, nonprofit organization dedicated to making voter registration part of every high school in America. We provide free training and resources for students and educators to run twice-yearly drives at their schools, and use data to identify areas of need and show results. With 4 million turning 18 and becoming eligible to vote every year, their numbers are meaningful. Our work has led to thousands of registrations and student-led registration drives at high schools across the country.



